Laker 9 4l

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September 4, 2017

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Your Guide to What’s Happening in NH’s Lakes Region

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September 4 • Vol 34 • No 22

IN THIS ISSUE

Steamboats • page 3

What’s Up • pages 10-13

See More at

Golf • page 5

Get The Skinny Around the Winni


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September 4, 2017

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September 4, 2017

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Celebrating 45 Years of the Best Little Steamin’ Event on Winnipesaukee! out with other boat owners and also answer questions that spectators may have. Leading up to the event, David fields inquiries from steamboat collectors, enthusiasts and from people who don’t know much about steamboats but want to find out more. “We have been getting a lot of calls asking about the event,” he says. As president of the Lee’s Mills Steamboat Association, he coordinates steamboat participants and catering and a lot more as he and his helpers prepare for the annual steamboat event. David is a lifelong expert when it comes to anything steam operated and • Steamboat Continued on page 4

By Kathi Caldwell-Hopper

“Gee, I can’t believe it’s been 45 years!” says Lee’s Mills Steamboat Meet founder and organizer, David Thompson. He laughs as he recalls the early steamboat meet “back in 1972” that came about after some guys who liked antique boats got talking about having a get-together. It was planned to be some boat lovers meeting up to show off their boats and maybe have a picnic or cookout. These days, steamboat enthusiasts from all over the world attend the steamboat meet at the Lee’s Mills locaSteamboating during the meet. (Courtesy photo) tion in Moultonboro. “We are expectthusiasts from all over the world pack to show off their steamboats and hang ing the guys from the United Kingdom their bags and travel to the Lee’s Mills this year,” David adds. “They love Meet every year. According to the my son’s steam truck and would take event founder/organizer, if you are into it back to England with them if they steamboats, attending the Lee’s Mill could!” Meet is a bit of a rite of passage. As the calendar turns to September, David laughs as he says, “If you hathoughts turn to fall activities, such ven’t been to the event, you need to atas apple festivals, fairs and pumpkin tend because everyone does at one time carving. But if you live in the Lakes or another.” Region or love old steamboats, you are This year, the Steamboat Meet will in for a treat at the unique event when be held from September 8 to 17 in steamboat lovers from all over bring Moultonboro. David started the event their boats to Winnipesaukee for the 45 years ago to share the hobby of chance to share stories, get suggestions steamboating with other owners of the on repairing an engine, and to show off unique boats and to provide a great their steamboats and generally have a spectator event for the public. The grand old time. abin Rust event is quite casual, and David says In today’s day and age of speedy C PLYMOUTH MEREDITH LINCOLN ic z o 603-238-3250 603-279-1333 603-745-7251 there are no set hours, although the boats, fast cars and super highways, 55 Main Street 742 Tenney Mtn. Hwy. Junction of Rt. 3 & 25 boats are there usually by about 9 am. steamboat travel may be a thing of the -F David expects about 50 to 55 steampast, but that doesn’t mean there is no sur ni ture & Mattre sse boats will participate in the meet this interest in old-fashioned steamboats; abin Rust y C indeed, a core group of steamboat en- icyear, many return aficionados who love OPEN DAILY 9AM-5PM • SUNDAYS 10AM - 4PM • COZYCABINRUSTICS.COM oz s

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September 4, 2017

• Steamboat Continued from page 3 he has passed his love on to his sons Dave Jr., Blair and Brian. His daughter, Kelly, contributes to the event by making a variety of foods and her famous apple pies! No one leaves the meet hungry, according to David. Steamboating just seems to come naturally to David and his sons (Dave Jr., Blair and Brian). David grew up spending a lot of time at Goodhue Hawkins Navy Yard in Wolfeboro where his father and grandfather worked on the lake running and fixing commercial steamboats. “My grandfather had steamboats in the early 1900s and my Dad followed. In the 1930s, the last of the steamboats were dying off. After that, they went to gas powered. Then, during World War II with the gasoline shortage, steamboats were a good way to get around,” David says. David learned at a young age how to work on the little steam-powered vessels. Over the years, he has owned many steamboats and he loves to talk about the old-fashioned vessels. This year, as in the recent past, he will be bringing his Viking 1969 steamboat to the meet.

Historically, the Lee’s Mills meet started casually and to a large extent, the event has continued to have a laidback, come-as-you-are atmosphere. “I started the meet in the early 1970s after we were down at the Weirs for a boat show.” David and fellow steamboat owners/friends discussed the growing interest in antique boats and steamboats. The group talked about having a cookout. A few steamboater owners showed up and it just grew from there. Those who come to show off their steamboats, to share stories and ask questions about problems they may be having with their steamboat are all welcome, although you must contact David ahead of time at 603-476-2224 to let him know you will be bringing a steamboat to the event. Last year’s event saw about 300 people a day on weekdays and about 1,500 people on weekend days, quite a healthy number of people who are interested and curious about steamboats. David says it takes a lot of wood to fire the steamboats at the meet, but it is just one of the many things that it takes to run the meet. David’s family is involved in the popular Lee’s Mills event. Daughter Kelly runs the Cook Nook at the steamboat meet and sells lots of homemade

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foods and even homemade pies. David chuckles as he relays that his daughter “always has apple pies in the freezer, ready to go, with more to be made!” Kelly makes and freezes the pies – which is a lot of work – and bakes them the night before the steamboat meet begins. Hungry boaters and spectators are very grateful for all Kelly’s baking, and the food is a popular part of the event. Son Brian seems to have inherited his father’s love for “tinkering.” Brian, with the help of a friend, built a beautiful steam-fired truck that took over a year to build. It is a model of a 1908 English steam powered truck and quite a conversation piece. Just being at the meet and seeing the incredibly beautiful little steamboats is a treat in itself. (Be prepared to watch the steamboats taking it slow – they typically travel about four to six miles per hour.) “The boat owners are all very friendly and they love to answer questions,” says David. Although the atmosphere of the meet is casual and there is no spectator admission fee, donations are always welcome. It seems there is something for everyone at the upcoming steamboat meet. If you love to “tinker with engines” or if you enjoy history and old boats or have a love of photography and are looking

for some unique subject matter, the meet has it all. And if you love a good home cooked dessert or meal, you will find a lot to choose from at the meet as well! While steam boating is a very specialized hobby, it seems to draw people like a magnet. It has been a part of David’s life since he was a child and he is happy to share his knowledge and love of this piece of boating history with others. Organizing the 45th annual Lee’s Mills Steamboat Meet may indeed be a lot of work, but this time of year excitement runs high in the Thompson household as David answers phone calls and prepares for the event. As the calendar turns to September, get ready for the unique event that offers something for everyone. Bring the kids, bring older family members and friends for a look back at steam boating. And plan to celebrate the 45th anniversary of one of the most unique events held yearly on Lake Winnipesaukee. For information on the September 8 to 17 Annual Lee’s Mills Steamboat Meet, call David Thompson at 603476-2224. Lee’s Mills Road, the site of the steamboat meet, is located off Rt. 25 in Moultonboro, NH. Follow Lee’s Mills Road and the Loon Center signs; the meet is beyond the Center.)

Lake Winnipesaukee Association annual meeting & tour improvements at Weirs & Winnipesaukee Pier Join the Lake Winnipesaukee Association for its annual meeting on Wednesday, September 6 at 5:30 pm at the renovated Winnipesaukee Pier on Lakeside Avenue, Weirs Beach. The program will begin with a tour of the recent changes made at the Pier, followed by a brief indoor presentation by the City of Laconia Department of Public Works and Parks and Recreation on recent storm water practices installed and planned. Staff from the City of Laconia will then conduct a

walking tour along Lakeside Avenue to discuss the storm water runoff issues, future proposed work, and storm water improvement practices that have been implemented. The public is encouraged to attend to learn more about the completed and planned improvements at the Weirs that will help keep Lake Winnipesaukee clean. For more information on the program, please contact the Lake Winnipesaukee Association at 603-581-6632.

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Discover Your Inner Dancer

Northeastern Ballet Theatre of Wolfeboro and Dover, NH will begin its 2017-18 school year on Tuesday, September 5. Come try a class for free or register now for the year. With studios in the McConnell Center in Dover and 26 Glendon Street, across from Rite Aid in Wolfeboro, Northeastern Ballet Theatre offers professional classical ballet training for ages 3 through adult of all abilities. Northeastern Ballet Theatre (NBT) is the artistic vision and passion of its founder, Edra Toth, former prima ballerina for Boston Ballet Company. Edra has built a life teaching children and adults the joy of dance. It is the philosophy of NBT that ballet is an art form. Within a positive and encouraging atmosphere, dancers are taught to develop their unique artistic abilities. Northeastern Ballet Theatre is

of its students by offering them the opportunity for a rich, life-long experience through serious training in a professional dance atmosphere. Edra Toth believes that there is an “inner dancer” within each of us waiting to be discovered and that ballet is not only about using your body, but your mind and soul. NBT offers partial and full scholarships to those in need: Miss Toth remembers those who helped her find her life through dance and vows to give that experience to as many others as possible. Please call NBT to discuss class placement. For more information about class times and pricing, visit www.northeasternballet. org, call 603-834-8834 or email northeasternballettheatre@ gmail.com. Make this the year you discover your inner dancer!

Students at Northeastern Ballet Theatre. (Courtesy photo)

not a competition- or recital-driven school. Classical ballet classes focus on technique for the entire year, and there are many opportunities for performance experience with NBT, including an annual production of The Nutcracker, a spring/summer production (past productions include

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Cinderella, Beauty and the Beast, Snow White, Sleeping Beauty, and original ballets such as Dracula). Many students aim for professional dance careers, and others simply enjoy dancing as recreation. NBT appreciates and respects both of these purposes, and feels it can best serve the diversity

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Fall Into Art This September Art Works - CCAC is the place to be this fall with a variety of classes in a new studio space next to the gallery in Chocorua. Learn to draw in the Pencil Drawing Class, take a Pottery Class, or transform a piece of furniture with color and pattern in the Furniture Painting Class. And for young artists, there’s a Printmaking Class for children ages 6 to 10. Please pre-register, as space is limited. For Plein Air artists – join the Plein Air Painting Group, meeting every other Tuesday from 11 am to 3 pm until September 19. This is a free gathering; please bring supplies. There is no instruction, but it is a great way to paint outdoors in a supportive atmosphere. For information, contact: jpgoodwinarts@roadrunner.com, call 603-3671046 or 603-323-8041. You’ve been eyeing that dilapidated small table for years, swearing you’ll

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make something of it. Now is your chance in the Color and Pattern Furniture Painting Class where you can learn to take your old piece of furniture and turn it into an extraordinary painted piece of art! You supply the wooden piece that has been sanded and primed with water-based sealer and instructor Theo Page will guide you through the process of creating a unique and lasting treasure. This workshop will be held Saturday and Sunday, September 9 and 10, from 10 am to 5 pm. bring a lunch, water and snack along with your readyto-go piece. Painting supplies will be supplied. The class size will be a maximum of five students. The cost of the two-day class is $60.00 per person. Kids will have fun in the Explore the Art of Printmaking on September 16, from 9 to 12 noon. The threehour class is designed to help kids,

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ages 6-10, learn the art of etching on Styrofoam and transfer to paper with the use of colored inks. Student will be introduced to a step-by-step process of developing a self-portrait that will be treasured for years to come. Investor William Kasuli hails from NYC and was an art educator for 20 years. Students will need to bring a snack for a mid-class break. The cost for the three-hour instruction is $35.00 per person. Materials will be supplied, and the minimum for class will be six

September 4, 2017

and maximum 12. Pre-registration is required by September 12. Contact Art Works-Chocorua Creative Arts Center to pre-register and for further information: 603-3238041, artworks4us2@gmail.com or visit www.chocoruaartworks.com. Classes meet at Art WorksCCAC, 132 White Mountain Highway (Rt. 16), Chocorua, NH. The gallery is open September through December 31, 2017 from Friday to Monday, 10 am to 5 pm.

Old Camp Culture Ahh, the sights, sounds, and smells of a burning campfire in the cool of a summer’s night. Travel back with Kathy Eaton to days gone by in her presentation, “Old Camps on Wentworth & Winnipesaukee”, sponsored by the Wolfeboro Historical Society on September 11 at 7 pm at the Wolfeboro Community Center at 32 Lehner Street. Author/writer, Kathy Eaton, draws on her own family’s experience in carrying on the legacy of their Winnipesaukee island home established in 1893. Sharing anecdotes covering seven generations, the program will prove both amusing and informative as she shares the camp’s evolution from a couple with an only child to a family trust with 98 blood-line descendants

and still growing! Kathy Eaton is a Wolfeboro resident who began her writing career with the Granite State News in 1974 following graduation from Suffolk University. She authored Remember When…a collection of Old Photographs of Wolfeboro, NH, in 1976 and co-founded The Laker newspaper in 1984 where she served as editor and primary writer until 2001. Kathy does public relations and marketing consultation through NHWordsmith.com. She and her husband, Richard Eaton, also own the Wolfeboro Trolley Company which tours Wolfeboro and gives lively historical facts about Wolfeboro’s sights and sounds.

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PUBLISHER Dan Smiley

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ADVERTISING Jim Cande Maureen Padula Christie Pacheco

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EDITOR Kathi Caldwell-Hopper

This newspaper assumes no financial responsibility for typographical errors but will reprint that part of an advertisement in which the typographical error affects the value of same. Advertisers will please notify the management immediately of any errors which may occur.

PRODUCTION MANAGER Gina Lessard

All rights reserved. No reproduction in part or whole without expressed written consent. Cover Photo Courtesy of Melvin Village Marina/Four Winns Boats

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September 4, 2017

Make a Vow: Bike This Fall! Story by Barbara Neville Wilson Photos by Jeb Wallace Brodeur Fall in New Hampshire is not meant to be savored from inside a car, barreling down the highway at 55-plus miles per hour. Make a vow now. Take time this season to slow down and meander off the beaten track—on two wheels. The Lakes Region is home to hundreds of miles of bike paths, bike trails, and bike-able scenic roads. Bike Paths: Thanks to the rich railroad history of the region, the area offers several recreational paths built on or alongside the beds of oncebusy railroads. Shared by walkers, runners, bikers, wheelchairs— often snowmobilers in winter—and sometimes horses and even railway Putt-Putt cars, they are a safe place for new and returning bikers to set a leisurely pace without worrying about automobile traffic. Winnipesaukee/Opechee/ Winnisquam (WOW) Trail-1.7 miles: End points are on Elm Street and Union Avenue (Lakeport) and Belmont town line. Set on the southwest shore of Winnipesaukee, this flat, paved trail is 10 feet wide and a favorite for families with kids. It runs through downtown Laconia, next to the railroad

New Hampshire’s Lakes Region offers biking opportunities for all stages of experience and all levels of courage. These bikers are at the Highland Mountain Bike Park in Northfield where classes, camps, race series, demos, and a chairlift help novice and experienced cyclists improve their skills. station and public library. Riders enjoy beautiful views of Lake Opechee and convenient access to the Freighthouse Museum where local rail history is shared and artifacts are displayed. A stop for a quick snack or lunch in downtown Laconia or a tour of the historic Belknap Mill can make a ride a lovely day trip. Plans are set for the WOW Trail to eventually follow the

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old railroad corridor all the way to Weirs Beach and eventually Meredith. (http://www.wowtrail.org/) Lake Winnisquam Scenic Trail-1.8 miles: End points—Leslie Roberts Road and Route 3. A paved trail has a public beach and playground, and there also are picnic restroom facilities at the Leslie Roberts Facility. Riders can expect gorgeous views of the lake and lots of company, as it’s a favorite with walkers, runners and dog walkers. (http:// belmontnh.org/docs/WinniTrail/ WinniTrailBrochure140618.pdf) Winnipesaukee River Trail-5.1 miles: End points—Central St./US 3/ SR 11 (Franklin) and Tilton Rd/SR 140 (Tilton). Don’t miss the unique Sulphite Bridge along this hard pack gravel and dirt trail. It is perhaps the only upside-down covered bridge in the United States. You’ll also see ruins of mills and dams, testaments to the manufacturing that made the region an industrial hub in the 19th and 20th centuries, and why the railroad was built here. (http://www.winnirivertrail. org/) Chamberlain Reynolds Trails-4 miles: East and West Fire Roads, Center Harbor, with 157 acres of forest on Squam Lake shores. Hard-pack trail beginnings from the East and West Fire Road parking lots are suitable for young children. Trail difficulty increases markedly after that. (https://

w w w. c e n t e r h a r b o r n h . o rg / p a r k s recreation/pages/nature-trails) Cotton Valley Trail-12 miles: End points—Wolfeboro Railroad Depot in downtown Wolfeboro and Sanbornville Heritage Park. Parking and restroom facilities are available at Wolfeboro and Sanbornville, as well as at Fernald Station on Route 109 and Albee Beach off Route 28. The entire 12 miles of trail will be complete this fall, and follows the Wolfeboro spur of the Boston & Maine Railroad. The hard-pack trail crosses tracks at points along the way, so caution is required. The picturesque trail crosses causeways across Crescent Lake and Lake Wentworth and travels through nature preserves. The Albee Beach offers a chance to bask on the beach or enjoy a picnic on a warm and sunny late summer/fall day. The Turntable Park at the Sanbornville terminus features a restored B & M turntable. Club members of the Cotton Valley Rail Trail, who run railway motorcar or “putt putt” cars along it several times a year, perform much of the maintenance work on the Cotton Valley Trail. It is believed to be the only rail trail in the United States where Putt Putt cars share the way with recreational users in this manner. (https://www. traillink.com/trail/cotton-valley-railtrail; http://cottonvalley.org/) Mountain Bike Trails: Rugged beauty and steep changes in terrain draw mountain bikers to New Hampshire. Some of the state’s top-rated mountain bike trails are found right here in The Lakes Region. Franklin Falls (also known as The Dam), Franklin—10 miles of trails: The mountain bike trail system was built by mountain bikers for mountain bikers. The New England Mountain Bike Association (www.nemba.org) describes The Dam this way, “Much of the terrain is very ‘un-New England like’ with very few rocks. As a result, Franklin Falls is known for its flowing, buff single track. It is a great venue for group rides with mixed skill levels. Experts can enjoy high-speed tree slaloming, while novices can enjoy the trails at a more relaxed pace without getting in over their heads in difficulty level. Even your roadie friends can have fun here! Some of the fastest • Bike Continued on page 14

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September 4, 2017

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Your Where-To-Go, What-To-Do Guide for the Lakes Region

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Through Sept. 10, Many Hands Make Art Work: Collaborative Works, art exhibit, Azure Rising, 628 S. Main St., Wolfeboro, www.azurerisinggallery.wordpress.com. Through Sept. 30, Cate Poole Art Exhibit, Libby Museum, 755 N. Main St., Wolfeboro, info: 569-1035, www.thelibbymuseum.org.

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Through Sept. 10, Lakes Region Art Assoc. Members Art Show, Tanger Outlet, Rt. 3, Tilton, www.lraanh.org.

Your Where-To-Go, What-To-Do Guide for the Lakes Region TEAM TRIVIA

Brain saving fun... Serious Merriment!! Starting at 8pm

Sept. 2-4, 28th Annual Labor Day Weekend Craft Festival, (Sept. 2: 10 am-6 pm; Sept. 3: 10 am-5 pm; Sept. 4: 10 am-4 pm), Alton Bay Community House and Grounds, free admission, rain or shine, Castleberry Fairs, 332-2616, www.castleberryfairs.com. Sept. 4, Storm the Castle! 8 am, fun run/walk for all ages, Castle in the Clouds, Rt. 171, Moultonboro, 476-5410. Sept. 5, Evening of Poetry, Katherine Rhoda & David Wallace Lawrence, poets, storytellers, musicians welcome to share their talents, 7:30 pm, public welcome, Moultonboro Public Library, Holland St., Moultonboro, 476-8895. Sept. 5, Nature as the Classroom, 3-4 pm, Museum of the White Mts., 34 Highland St., Plymouth, call for info: 535-3210.

Tues.

Wed.

OPEN MIC NIGHT

Sept. 5, Northeastern Ballet Theatre School Year Begins, Wolfeboro & Dover, info/ sign up: 834-8834 or email northeasternballettheatre@gmail.com, LADIES NIGHT

Multi-talented host Paul Luff and a It’s all about the ladies with Cody great variety of talent. Beginning at James setting the groove - ladies 8pm. To get in the gig,email: get special prizes* Beginning at 8pm pluff1@myfairpoint.net

Sept. 5, Plein Air Painting Group, 11 am-3 pm, Art Works Chocorua Creative Arts Center, 132 White Mt. Highway, Chocorua, free, sign up: 323-8041.

Sept. 5, Remembering Pearl Harbor, film screening, 6:30 pm, Wright Museum, hat-To-Do Guide for the W , o G Center St., Wolfeboro, advance reservations: 569-1212, www.wrightmuseum.org. L akes re-To e R h egio Sept. 6, Discovering NH Stone Walls, 7 pm, program by Kevin Gardner, free, Castle rW u nin the Clouds Carriage House, info: 476-5410. o Y

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Sept. 6, Third Mushroom Walk/Fungal Foray, Museum of the White Mts., leave museum at 2:45 pm for the walk. (Walk runs from about 3-4 pm.) Evolutionary biologist Dr. Tommy Stoughton of the PSU Center for the Environment will lead a short and leisurely fungal foray and hike to Langdon Park in Plymouth. You do not need to have attended any of the other walks to join this one. Suggested donation: $10. Museum of the White Mts., 34 Highland St., Plymouth, call for info: 535-3210. Sept. 6 & 8, Beginning Tatting with Elaine O’Donal, 10:30 am-2:30 pm, Meredith Fine Craft Gallery - League of NH Craftsmen, 279 DW Highway, Meredith, 279-7920.

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Sept. 6, Full Moon Campfire and Walk, 7-8:30 pm, free, Remick Country Doctor Museum & Farm, Tamworth, info. 323-7591.

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Sept. 7, Button Up NH, 6-7:30 pm, workshop sponsored by NHSAVES, Gil Richardson of NH Sustainable Energy Assoc. will share tips and tricks on how to improve the energy efficiency of your home, such as weatherization, energy audits, and rebates. Free and open to public. Gilford Public Library, Potter Hill Rd., Gilford. Sign-up by calling 524-6042. Sept. 7, Camps + Schools = Complete Education, talk by Dr. Christopher Thurber on how summer camps teach skills. 5-6 pm, Museum of the White Mts., 34 Highland St., Plymouth, info: 535-3210. (Suggested donation: $10 p/p). Sept. 7, Destination: Americas, 2-3 pm, Florida: South and West Coasts, Wolfeboro Public Library, 259 South Main St., Wolfeboro, 569-2428. Sept. 7, GOACC Business Expo, 5:30-7:30 pm, location/info: www.ossipeevalley. org. Sept. 7, Musician Joel performs for Acoustic Thursday, 8 pm, Patrick’s Pub, 18 Weirs Rd., Gilford, 293-0841, www.patrickspub.com. Sept. 7, Thirsty Thursday on the Belle, 6:30-8:30 pm, Winnipesaukee Belle, departs Wolfeboro Town Docks, music, dancing and cash bar, tickets: fire come/first served, info: Wolfeboro Inn: 569-3016. Sept. 7, Yoga for Seniors, 5:30 pm, Gunstock Mt. Resort, Cherry Valley Rd., Gilford, pre-register/info: 293-4341. Sept. 8, Bob Marley comedian, doors open 6 pm, concert 7:30 pm, Entrain and Copilot bands, Flying Monkey Performance Center, Main St., Plymouth, tickets/info: 536-2551, www.flyingmonkeynh.com. Sept. 8, Brewer’s Jamboree, Tamworth Camping Area, 194 Depot Rd., Tamworth, 323-8031, www.tamworthcamping.com. Sept. 8, Dueling Pianos, Matt Langley vs. Gardner Berry, 9 pm, Patrick’s Pub, 18 Weirs Rd., Gilford, 293-0841, www.patrickspub.com. Sept. 8, Full Moon Fantasy, dine and dance board M/S Mount Washington. 6-9 pm, 366-5531, www.cruiseNH.com. Sept. 8, Plants of Field & Forest, Outdoor Walk, 2-3:30 pm, Remick Country Doctor Museum & Farm, Tamworth, register/info: 323-7591. Sept. 8, Rick Springfield & Richard Marx concert, doors open 6 pm, Bank of NH Pavilion, Meadowbrook Lane, Gilford, tickets/info: 603-293-4700, www. meadowbrook.net.


September 4, 2017

Page 11

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SUMMER 2017

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Sept. 8-17, Lee Mills Steamboat meet, Town Docks, Moultonborough. Features parade of boats each Sunday of the event. 2pm the first Sunday, 10 am the second. Race on Wednesday from the Moultonborough town docks to 19 Mile Bay in Tuftonboro. 476-2224 Sept. 9, After Hours Guided Hike, 1 ½ hr. guided hike to watch sun set over Belknap/ Ossipee Mts., meet at Welcome Center at 6 pm, Gunstock Mt. Resort, Cherry Valley Rd., Gilford, pre-register/info: 293-4341. Sept. 9, Alabama and Dwight Yoakam concert, doors open 5 pm, Bank of NH Pavilion, Meadowbrook Lane, Gilford, tickets/info: 603-293-4700, www. meadowbrook.net. Sept. 9, Capt. Enoch Remick House guided tour, 11 am & 1 pm, Remick Museum, Tamworth, 323-7591. Sept. 9, Eagles Tribute by Steve McBrian & Morris Manning, 9 pm, Patrick’s Pub, 18 Weirs Rd., Gilford, 293-0841, www.patrickspub.com. Sept. 9, Live Animal Program, program presented by Squam Lakes Natural Science Center, 10:30 am, Lost River Gorge & Boulder Caves, N. Woodstock, 745-8031. Sept. 9, Nuno Felted Scarf with Melinda LaBarge, 9:30 am-3:30 pm, Meredith Fine Craft Gallery - League of NH Craftsmen, 279 DW Highway, Meredith, 2797920. Sept. 9, Rock, Roll & Remember, dine and dance aboard M/S Mount Washington. 6-9 pm, 366-5531, www.cruiseNH.com. Sept. 9, 16th Annual NE Slalom Championships, 8 am, Back Bay, Wolfeboro, Abenaki Water Ski Club, great spectator sport, 569-3017. Sept. 9, Tattoo Cowboy concert, doors open 7 pm, Rochester Opera House, 31 Wakefield St., Rochester, tickets/info: 335-1992, www.rochesteroperahouse.com. Sept. 9, Tom Dixon Band, live band, doors open 7 pm, Whiskey Barrel Music Hall, 546 N. Main St., Laconia, info: 527-8210. Sept. 9, TriTek Events Pitch Pine Challenge, 7 am-noon, age 6 and up, challenge yourself and get aware of fitness, White Lake State Park, 1632 White Mt. Highway, Tamworth, www.ossipeevalley.org. Sept. 9-10, Painting Furniture with Color & Pattern, instructor Theo Page, 10 am-5 pm, Art Works, 132 White Mt. Highway, Chocorua, 323-8041, www.www. chocoruaartworks.com. Sept. 10, Belknap County Day, Gunstock Mt. Resort, Gilford, info: 293-4341. Sept. 10, Glass Suncatcher with Lynn Haust, 12:30-2:30 pm, Meredith Fine Craft Gallery - League of NH Craftsmen, 279 DW Highway, Meredith, 279-7920. Sept. 11, Art of Photography Retold, 6:30-7:30 pm, with photographer Bonnie Edwards, Meredith Fine Craft Gallery/League of NH Craft, fine art photography, discussion takes place at Meredith Community Center, 1 Circle Drive, Meredith. 2797920. Sept. 11, Grand Hotels of the White Mts. – Architecture, History and the Preservation Record, Moultonboro Historical Society meeting/program, 7 pm, held at Moultonboro Public Library, Holland St., Moultonboro, history of grand hotels in White Mts. with speaker/historian Bryant Tolles, Jr. Info: 476-8895.

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Sept. 11, Old Camps on Wentworth and Winnipesaukee, presented by Kathy Eaton, Clark House Museum, Wolfeboro Historical Society, http://www. wolfeborohistoricalsociety.org/events.html Sept. 12, Live music at 6:30 pm, guest speaker at 7 pm, presentation: Interesting Brookfield Homes by Grace Ferguson and Craig Evans both of Brookfield by Peter Brown of Wakefield Corner, Wakefield-Brookfield Historical Society, 2851 Wakefield Road, free, all welcome, info: 340-2295. Sept. 12, The Twisted Road to Auschwitz, lecture by Tom White of the Cohen Holocaust and Genocide Center, 7 pm, Wright Museum, Center St., Wolfeboro, advance reservations: 569-1212, www.wrightmuseum.org. Sept. 13, Opera in the Morning, 10-11 am, free, Wolfeboro Public Library, 259 South Main St., Wolfeboro, 569-2428. Sept. 14, Eric Grant performs for Acoustic Thursday, 7 pm, Patrick’s Pub, 18 Weirs Rd., Gilford, 293-0841, www.patrickspub.com. Sept. 14, Lasagna Dinner, 5:30-7 pm, Women’s Fellowship of Union Congregational Church, 80 Main St., Union, info: 473-2727. Sept. 14, Thirsty Thursday on the Belle, 6:30-8:30 pm, Winnipesaukee Belle, departs Wolfeboro Town Docks, music, dancing and cash bar, tickets: fire come/first served, info: Wolfeboro Inn: 569-3016. Sept. 14, Yoga for Athletes, 5:30 pm, Gunstock Mt. Resort, Cherry Valley Rd., Gilford, pre-register/info: 293-4341. Sept. 15, Country Rock, dine and dance board M/S Mount Washington. 6-9 pm, 3665531, www.cruiseNH.com. Sept. 15, Dueling Pianos, Jim Tyrell vs. Gardner Berry, 9 pm, Patrick’s Pub, 18 Weirs Rd., Gilford, 293-0841, www.patrickspub.com.

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Your Where-To-Go, What-To-Do Guide for the Lakes Region Page 12

September 4, 2017

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ONGOING: Andover Historical Society, historic buildings open Saturdays, 10 am-3 pm, Sundays 12:30-3 pm, tour Potter Place Railroad Station, J.C. Emons Store, gravesites of famous magician Richard Potter and his wife, Tucker Mt. Schoolhouse. pres@ andoverhistory.org. Art Walk, Wolfeboro, (9/30), self-guided tour of galleries, 5-7:30 pm. Select locations featuring fine art paintings, prints, jewelry, live music, visit Wolfeboro Art Walk on Facebook. Belknap Mill, programs and self-guided tours of the Power House, 1823 historic former textile mill. Hours/information: 524-8813. The Mill Plaza, 25 Beacon Street East, Laconia. Belknap Range Conservation Coalition Meetings, 3rd Thurs. of the month, email info@belknaprange.org for meeting time and place. Benz Center Senior Meals, Sandwich, each Wednesday at noon. Well-balanced meal. Age 60 and older, small donation requested, 284-7211, www.benzcommunitycenter.webs.com. Book Sale, first Saturday of each month, Cook Memorial Library, Tamworth, 10 am-noon, 323-8510. Castle in the Clouds, tours/exhibits/events, café, walking trails, Rt. 171, Moultonboro, open daily, info: 476-5900, www.castleintheclouds.org. Dog Walking Group, 8 am on Wednesdays through Sept. 27, free, open to public, bring your leashed dog and join the group for trail walk around the Castle property, Ossipee Park Rd., off Rt. 171, parking in hiker’s parking lot, info: 476-5900. Fall Foliage Dinner Cruises, Sundays Sept. 24-Oct. 15, M/S Mount Washington, departs from Weirs Beach, info/tickets/departure times: www.cruiseNH.com, 366BOAT. Fiber Friends, Mondays, 10 am-12:30 pm, drop-in fiber arts group, work on rug hooking, needlecrafts, knitting, etc. No formal instruction, participants offer support, free, new members always welcome, or drop by to view fiber projects, Gilford Public Library, 31 Potter Hill Rd., Gilford, 524-6042. Finding Place on Paper – Contemporary Poets and Printmakers Explore the Lakes Region & White Mts., on exhibit through Oct. 22, creations of local artists and poets on display, Carriage House, Castle in the Clouds, Moultonboro, www. castleintheclouds.org, 476-5900. Forgotten Arts: Fiber Arts Group, meets every other Tues., 9:30 am-noon. Fiber artists and/or interested onlookers welcome to join Happy Weavers & Friends group to learn the historic art of weaving, spinning, sewing, quilting, and more. Bring a project to work on, if desired. Group meets monthly on an every other Tuesday schedule at Remick Museum & Farm, Tamworth Village. Free. (Does not include Museum admission.) 323-7591.

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Franconia Heritage Museum, 553 Main St., Franconia, 1880s farmhouse permanent and special exhibits. 2017 exhibit: The Grange, A Voice for the Farmer. Saturday 1-4 pm, through Columbus Day Weekend. Free admission, donations welcome, 8235000, www.franconianh.org. Also visit Iron Furnace Interpretive Center, Octagonal “Stone Stack,” the only Blast Furnace standing in NH, view any time. Scenic picnic area by Gayle River, Main St., Franconia Village Rt. 18 junction of Rt. 117 by Sugar Hill bridge. Franklin Hospital Farmer’s Market, Tues. 3-6 pm, through Sept. 12, Aiken Ave., Franklin, 934-2060. Kirkwood Gardens, stroll garden with colorful plants and shrubs, see birds. Free, open to public, Squam Lakes Natural Science Center, 23 Science Center Rd., Holderness, 968-7194, www.nhnatureorg. Laconia Farmer’s Market, 8 am-noon, Beacon St. East, downtown Laconia, www. laconiafarmersmarket.com. Lake Winnipesaukee Museum, Rte. 3, Weirs Beach. Preserving and promoting history of Lake Winnipesaukee and vicinity with memorabilia, photos, maps, models of steamboats 1833-1939, posters and photos of grand hotels plus artifacts ranging from Indian arrowheads to Big Band posters. Lectures and children’s corner. Call for hours: 366-5950, www.lwhs.us. Lantern Tours, Lost River Gorge & Boulder Caves, guided lantern tours on Sat. & Sun. in Sept., limited dates in Oct. N. Woodstock, 745-8031. Libby Museum, a museum of natural history, 755 N. Main St., Wolfeboro, for more information & hours: 569-1035, www.thelibbymuseum.org. Lunch Box to Paint Box, noon-1 pm, first Tues. of each month artist Larry Frates demonstrates drawing and painting, free, public welcome, Belknap Mill, 25 Beacon St. East, Laconia, 524-8813, www.belknapmill.org.

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September 4, 2017

Millie B Boat Rides, tour Lake Winnipesaukee in vintage wooden Hacker Craft Millie B, rides run for 45 minutes, departs from Wolfeboro Town Docks, NH Boat Museum for tickets/info: 569-4554, www.nhbm.org. Milton Farmer’s Market and Free Museum Admission, last Sat. of each month May-Oct., 9:30 am-1:30 pm, local crafts, farm produce, homemade bread, jellies, homespun yarn, handmade and locally grown items, NH Farm Museum, 1305 White Mt. Highway, Milton, 652-7840, farmmuseum.org. NH Boat Museum, exhibits: Racing on the Bay: The Wolfeboro Vintage Race Boat Regatta, Big Dreams; Little Boats: Mid-Century Model Toy Boats and Half Hull Models: Small Plans, Big Boats. Plus new exhibits of vintage boats and cars. 399 Center St., Wolfeboro, 569-4554, www.nhbm.org. Open May 27-Columbus Day. Prescott Farm Environmental Education Center, dawn-dusk, 928 White Oaks Rd., Laconia. Historic farm with 160 acres offers 3 miles of hiking trails, gardens, bird and wildlife viewing plus barn. Events and programs throughout the year. Call 366-5695, www.prescottfarm.org.

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Radio-Control Sailing Regattas, Bridge Falls Path on Back Bay, Wolfeboro, 1 pm Tuesday for Solings, 1 pm Thursday for US12’s, weather permitting. Visitors can give it a try, and boats available for youngsters. More info at www.nhbm.org. Remick Country Doctor Museum & Farm, Tamworth, 323-7591, info/summer hours: www.remickmuseum.org. Monday-Saturday 10 am-4 pm. River Otter Feeding, (May 1-Nov. 1), Mon., Wed. & Fri. 11:30 am, see two playful river otters enjoy an early lunch, learn about otter biology, included in regular trail admission, Squam Lakes Natural Science Center, Holderness, 968-7194, www. nhnature.org. Sailboat Races, Thursdays, 6 pm, through mid Oct., Saunders Bay, Gilford, Lake Winnipesaukee Sailing Assoc., info: www.lwsa.org, time/info: j80fleetcaptian@ lwsa.org. Sandwich Historical Society, Elisha Marston House Museum, Sandwich, for more information: www.sandwichhistorical.org or 284-6269. Sculpture Walk Tours, leaves from Mill Falls Marketplace (in front of Innisfree Bookshop) Wednesdays and Saturdays at 10 am, info: 279-9015. Sponsored by Greater Meredith Program, free, open to public, www.greatermeredithprogram.com.

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Sherman Flyers Model Airplane Club, try flying a model trainer aircraft, Rt. 3-A South, Plymouth, info: Todd Young, 786-2965. Summer Camps – The White Mts. Roots of an Iconic American Experience, through Sept. 13, 2017, history of camping/summer camps in NH White Mountain exhibit, Museum of the White Mountains, 34 Highland St., Plymouth, 535-3210. Sunday Brunch Cruise aboard the M/S Mount Washington, May 21-Oct. 22, cruise Lake Winnipesaukee aboard the Mount. Departs Weirs Beach at 10 am and 12:30 pm. Departs from Alton Bay at 11:15 am. (May 21 through October 22), 366-5531 or www.cruiseNH.com. Tamworth Summer Farmer’s Market, 30 Tamworth Rd., Sept. 9, 16, 23 and 30; Oct. 7, 14, 21 and 28. Info: www.tamworthfarmersmarket.org. Tamworth Writer’s Group, meets second Tues. of each month, 5 pm, Cook Memorial Library, downtown Tamworth. Led by Ed Martinez, aboutwritingtamworth@gmail. com. The American Soldier, A Photographic Tribute, The Civil War to the War in Iraq, exhibit from July 1-Oct. 31, Wright Museum, Center St., Wolfeboro, 5691212, www.wrightmuseum.org. Thursdays Laconia Main Street Marketplace, municipal parking lot, downtown Laconia, weekly markets from 3-6 pm, crafts, baked goods, produce and more, through Sept., info: 528-8541. Tools of Our Forefathers, old tools used in the area, Madison Historical Society, open June 1-Sept. 30 on Tues. from 2-4 pm, or by request; info: www.madisonnhhistoricalsociety.org. Trails Open Daily, (May 1-Nov. 1), Squam Lakes Natural Science Center, Holderness, 9:30 am-5 pm, admission charge, live animals in enclosures along the trail, info: www.nhnature.org., 968-7194. Up Close to Animals, meet live animals up close, educational talks, weekends through Columbus Day, Squam Lakes Natural Science Center, Holderness, info: 968-7194, www.nhnature.org. Winnipesaukee Belle Cruises, cruise the lake on the 19th-century replica paddleboat, day or night time cruise. May-mid-Oct. Departs from Wolfeboro Town Docks, downtown Wolfeboro, call Wolfeboro Inn for info: 569-3016. Wolfeboro Rotary Club Meeting, Mondays, 5:30 pm, 1812 Room at Wolfeboro Inn, 90 N. Main St., Wolfeboro, light dinner, guest speaker on various topics of interest, for more info: www.wolfebororotary.org.

Departs Wolfeboro Town Docks Daily Contact Us for Departure Times NHBM.org • 603-569-4554


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September 4, 2017

• Bike Continued from page 8 flow can be found on trails that include Moose Gully, Pine Snake, Bee, Lost Wall Rusty Bucket, and Stump. Trails on the slightly tighter side include Rogue, Caddywhompus, and Cellar Hole. The newest trail, Sniper is a nice combination of flow and undulating terrain. For advanced riders looking for a more technical challenge, Salmon Brook Trail offers steeper pitches, tight switchbacks, narrow benches, bridges, and rock gardens. (http://www.nemba. org/trails/new-hampshire/franklinfalls-dam) Gunstock Mountain Resort, Gilford—31 miles of trails: The ski resort offers its Nordic ski trails for mountain biking pleasure, offering single and double track, with trails for all levels. Advanced mountain bikers will appreciate the views across the summit com) trails. (http://www.gunstock.com/sumRamblin Vewe Farm, Gilford (access mer/hiking-biking-fishing) the trailhead from Boyd Hill Rd): The Highland Mountain Bike Park, conserved farm offers a well-marked Northfield: This bike park offers trail system open year-round and full-service, year-round mountain bikshared with recreational users. Single ing training and support. This fall featrack and dirt roads are suitable for tures kids’ camps, a Brodown Showgroups and families as well as individdown on September 9 and the Womuals. (http://www.ramblinvewefarm. en’s Freeride Festival on September 30 org/) and October 1. They have demo days, Scenic Roads: Central New Hamprace series all year, Fat Tire events shire boasts magnificent views in any throughout the winter, and a chairlift to Unique Designs and Custom-Crafted Jewelry in Gold, Silver and Precious Stones. season, but cobalt blue skies and shimtake people and bikes to the top of the The Charms of Summer... mering waters are set off particularmountain. (http://highlandmountain.

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ly well when seen against a backdrop of turning leaves. The less congested, eastern shore of Winnipesaukee and its surrounding towns offer a safer, and, perhaps, less stressful experience than biking in other areas of the region. Even so, the roads rarely have shoulders. Steve Flagg, owner of Wolfeboro’s Nordic Skier bike shop is quick to remind cyclists that they have the same legal rights as automobiles. By law, they have the right to take up as much of the road lane as they need for safety and practical maneuvering. Bike tour books often suggest trips in Tamworth/Sandwich and Wolfeboro/ Tuftonboro. Books found in libraries and secondhand shops may have been written several years ago and feature shops and stops no longer there, but the roads and mileage rarely change. Tamworth/Sandwich, 23 miles, moderate: 30 Bicycle Tours in New Hampshire features a lovely tour of Tamworth and North Sandwich, an area steeped in history and developing now into a trendy entertainment mecca. Start this tour in the center of Tamworth, parking on a Main Street featuring the venerable Barnstormers Theater (the oldest summer stock theater in the nation), the Remick Country Doctor Museum & Farm, and the modish Tamworth Lyceum, Mercantile and Distillery, flanked by the modestly named The Other Store. Ride away from Cleveland Hill toward Route 113, turning left at the historical marker onto Route 113A. You will pass the site of the former Chinook

Kennels where Alaskan sled dogs were raised for Admiral Richard Byrd’s Antarctic Expeditions. Just off 113A, on Gardner Hill Road is the famous NH Mushroom Company increasingly known for its foraging and “Can You Eat It?” classes. Follow Route 113A for more than 13 miles until it takes a hairpin left onto NH 113 East in North Sandwich. At the T of Routes 113 and 25, turn left and ride along the Bearcamp River to the “Whittier” section of Tamworth, named for the poet John Greenleaf Whittier. Highway Route 25 has a wide, smooth shoulder but watch carefully, for it can narrow precipitously at bridges. At the fork just beyond Mile 20, turn left, and continue turning and bearing left to stay on Route 113 until you get to Main Street and return to your vehicle. Wolfeboro/Tuftonboro, 30 miles, strenuous: Cantele’s Backroad Bicycling in New Hampshire features an itinerary that starts at Wolfeboro’s Back Bay municipal parking lot. We have modified the author’s directions a little to avoid the congestion and parking hazards of Wolfeboro’s Main Street. From the parking lot, head toward Back Bay and turn right on the Cotton Valley Trail. Follow it, passing by the water ski course and ruins of the former mill, over the boardwalk that crosses the old dam. At Center Street, take a left and almost immediately, bear left onto Route 109A. At about mile 7 is the Tuftonboro General Store, said to be the longest continuously running general store in the state. A little over a mile later, bear right onto Sodom Road where you’ll catch glimpses of mountains through wooded acres. At 11+ miles you’ll turn left at the junction of Route 171 where you will pass the entrances to Castle in the Clouds. As the name implies, the destination is atop the mountain, so perhaps left for a non-bicycling tour another time. At the stop sign, make a sharp left onto Route 109 to start your return trip south. For the next five miles, enjoy glimpses of the Ossipee Mountains on the left and at mile 20, scenic vistas of Lake Winnipesaukee at Melvin Village. Continue south, bearing right onto Route 109, glimpsing Winnipesaukee on the right and Mirror Lake on the left. It’s downhill for the majority of the return ride to Wolfeboro’s downtown.

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September 4, 2017

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Castle in the Clouds Asks the Public to Help Solve Research Mysteries Michelle Landry hopes the public might hold the key to solving some of Castle in the Clouds’ long-standing mysteries. As Curatorial Director, she is overseeing the restoration of the rooms at Lucknow, a nationally significant Arts & Crafts estate built by millionaire Thomas Plant in the Ossipee Mountains of Moultonboro in 1914. Landry believes that photographs taken by past visitors could provide the evidence she needs for some key furnishing decisions. “We hear many stories about furniture and artwork once on display, historic wallpapers now gone, and even the way the landscape has changed over time. To separate fact from hearsay and legend, we need more information. We’re inviting people to help us by sharing their photographs or other collections in hopes that they might reveal crucial supporting evidence.” Richard Robie opened the Castle to the public in 1959, just a few years after he purchased the property with its panoramic views of Lake Winnipesaukee for his summer home. In the 1990s, under subsequent owners, the water bottling plant and Lucknow Brewery were built. Guests who visited then might have toured these facilities and bought souvenirs, items also of interest to the curatorial team at the Castle. As part of the current major pres-

Castle in the Clouds Curatorial Director Michelle Landry shares the story of the Castle’s Aeolian Organ with campers from the Wolfeboro Recreation Department. The organ is just one of many features of the 1914 house that Landry is hoping to learn more about by inviting visitors from the past 60 years to share their photographs and recollections. (Courtesy photo)

ervation effort, the house’s 16 rooms are gradually being restored to their original appearance as shown in photographs taken by George Perry in the 1920s. At that time, retired Boston shoe manufacturer, Thomas G. Plant and his wife, Olive Dewey Plant, were living on the estate and seeking to sell it by means of a series of expensively pro-

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for outdoor exercise. The five-week Taylored Boot Camp will help people feel good and meet their health and fitness goals with an ever-changing array of exercises, stretching and movement for a great total body workout. All fitness levels are welcome to participate in this course, and it is taught by a nationally certified Personal Trainer and Health Coach. Classes begin Wednesday, September 6 at 5:50 am outside the Fitness Center/ Pool area of Taylor Community’s Woodside Building, on 435 Union Avenue in Laconia. Thereafter, the program will run Mondays and Wednesdays from 5:50 to 6:40 am, rain

$108.00 for five weeks (nine classes). A six-person minimum is required for the Boot Camp to be held. Please bring a mat or towel and hand weights if you have them. To register, contact Lena Nirk at 603-366-1405, or email lnirk@ taylorcommunity.org. Taylor Community is a not-forprofit Continuing Care Retirement Community whose mission is to provide the highest quality of retirement living options to support the independence, health and dignity of community residents. Visit www. taylorcommunity.org, or call 603-3661400 for more information.

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duced brochures and advertisements. Landry specifically hopes that a photograph of the Castle’s dining room rug might come to light. The original rug, which appears in some historic photographs, was removed from the mansion sometime in the 1990s. “We have just a few images showing this emerald green, octagonal rug, but there isn’t enough detail for us to confidently have a replica made. If someone has a photograph that shows the rug’s border pattern in detail, this could be a real breakthrough for the project.” But pictures and evidence from any decade of the Castle’s existence could be very helpful. “If any images turn up that show the Castle before the 1950s,

those would be extremely valuable to us as well,” notes Landry. Photographs are an important part of the research and restoration planning underway now, and may be donated or simply loaned for copying, making an invaluable addition to the Castle’s archive. Brochures, admission tickets, and other types of souvenirs and ephemera related to the Castle would also be of great value to the current research effort, as would locating original furnishings and artwork. For instance, only the player console and decorative pipes from the Castle’s original Aeolian organ remain in place, but the remainder of the instrument may still be in the area, and Landry would love to locate it. “It’s very possible that, if enough material surfaces, we may be able to produce an exhibit that tells the story of how the Castle property became an iconic New England tourist destination,” said Landry. “The public can play a very important role in the current work we do here at the Castle to preserve and share the fascinating story of this great estate.” If you have an item of interest that you would like to share with Landry, please email her at curator@castleintheclouds.org or call the curatorial office at 603-476-5418. Castle in the Clouds is owned and operated by the not-for-profit Castle Preservation Society whose mission is to preserve, interpret and share the buildings and landscape of the Castle in the Clouds as a historical and cultural resource for the Lakes Region. It is located off Route 171 in Moultonboro and is open seven days a week through Sunday, October 22.

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September 4, 2017

Lakes Region Conservation Trust Offers Guided Hike Join the Lakes Region Conservation Trust for a guided hike on Saturday, September 9 from 10 am to 1 pm to celebrate two LRCT land conservation projects in the Belknap Range Conservation Coalition (BRCC) Focus Area and along the headwaters of the Suncook River in Gilmanton. These projects are the 124-acre

projects and for the people who made them possible, Nancy Rendall and Marilyn and Michael Fenollosa. This will be followed by an optional guided hike on the conserved land led by Nancy Rendall. The Rendall Conservation Easement property encompasses significant parts of a large wetland complex below the outlets of Lake Eileen and Manning Lake, and includes riparian buffer and a perennial stream system that is part of the headwaters of the Suncook River. The property also includes fieldstone house and barn foundations and fieldstone walls marking intensive agricultural use in the past. The conservation easement was donated to LRCT by Nancy Rendall, and the property is now owned by the Fenollosas. The former Fenollosa parcel contains what was the last unprotected portion of a significant wetland and stream system that is part of the Suncook River headwaters, and approximately one-third of the parcel is classified as highest ranked habitat in the state under the NH Wildlife Action Plan. When the land was in danger of being sold for development, Marilyn and Mike Fenollosa stepped forward to acquire and hold it for more than a year until funding for LRCT’s acquisition could be secured. Nancy Rendall donated professional services for project planning and wetlands assessment needed to obtain grant funding, and the effort came to a

Rendall Conservation Easement and the abutting 88-acre former Fenollosa property, which lie between Guinea Ridge Road and the Griswold Scout Reservation (Camp Bell and Hidden Valley Camp) just downstream from Manning Lake and Lake Eileen. The program will begin with light refreshments and recognition for these

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Your Where-To-Go, What-To-Do Guide for the Lakes Region

Concord, New Hampshire

successful conclusion when LRCT received the necessary grant from the NH Department of Environmental Services Aquatic Resource Mitigation Fund. LRCT is very grateful to Nancy Rendall and the Fenollosas for their generosity and dedication to the success of these projects, as well as to the ARM Fund for its support for the Fenollosa project. LRCT’s conservation of these key parcels builds on other conservation achievements in the Belknap Range Focus Area in recent years involving LRCT, the Society for the Protection of NH Forests, BRCC, and others committed to conservation of the extraordinary scenic, natural, recreational, and historical resources of the Belknaps. Participation in this event will be limited and registration is required. To register for this program and to learn more about this event please visit www.lrct.org. The Lakes Region Conservation Trust was founded in 1979 to conserve the natural heritage of New Hampshire’s Lakes Region. To date, LRCT has conserved more than 145 properties totaling over 25,000 acres. LRCT’s conservation and stewardship work preserves community character, conserves critical wildlife habitat and diverse ecosystems, protects natural landmarks and scenic landscapes, and provides outdoor recreation opportunities for people of all ages.

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September 4, 2017

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September 4, 2017

Magnificent Ossipee Lake Waterfront A true stunner that was completely updated and remodeled in 2006. This gorgeous lake home is set on a peninsula and has over 500’ of waterfront with boat dock and is completely surrounded by sand. Modern amenities throughout include chef’s grade kitchen appliances, gleaming hardwood flooring, and unbelievable Master suite. Built to take in unrivaled views from every room. Ossipee - $839,000 Call Randy Parker – 603-455-6913

Own An Entire Peninsula… This incredible property in Wakefield is arguably the best location on Pine River Pond with 1,095’ of prime shore frontage and a beautifully appointed 3-bedroom contemporary lake house with beach, multiple docks and amazing, sweeping lake and mountain views east to west and wraparound decking plus screened porch for sunrise and sunset viewing. Wakefield - $775,000 Call Carol Bush – 603-387-4733

MaxfieldRealEstate.com • IslandRE.com Maxfield Real Estate has been bringing people and homes together for over 60 years. Explore the thousands of properties now being offered in the Lakes Region and beyond from the comfort of your own home. MaxfieldRealEstate.com is the go-to-site for buyers and sellers, with a wealth of information and resources to meet all your needs. Just one more reason why Maxfield is “simply the best.” Wolfeboro: 15 Railroad Avenue • 603-569-3128 Center Harbor: Junction Rtes. 25 & 25B • 603-253-9360 Alton: 108 Main Street • 603-875-3128


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September 4, 2017

September Programs at the Wright Museum of WWII On Monday, September 11, the Wright Museum of World War II will host the annual 9/11 Memorial Ceremony from 5:30 to 6:30 pm. The ceremony will take place in the Museum’s Seminar Room on the second floor. Doors will open at 5 pm. This non-political Memorial Ceremony will include presentations from police, fire and first responders. The ceremony also will include remembrance of those who lost their lives, honor first responders and all those involved in humanitarian efforts to save lives. The ceremony is organized by Bob and Lindy Viscio. For more information about the event, please call Bob or Lindy Viscio at 603-

569-0436. The Wright Museum will host the 19th lecture in its Ron Goodgame and Donna Canney 2017 Educational Program Series on Tuesday, September 12, from 7 to 8 pm at the Wright Museum. Doors open at 5:30 pm. “The Holocaust: the Twisted Road to Auschwitz” will include a lecture by Tom White. The presentation focuses on the cascading radicalization and evolution to genocide that took place from 1939 to 1945. White will explore how Nazi policy incrementally evolved and adapted over time in the complex face of changing political, military, and social circumstances. Specific

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attention will be placed upon the Nazi Cohen Center’s annual Kristallnacht Commemoration; and serves on the racial laboratory of Poland 1939-1940. Topics to be covered include: Nazi Board of Directors of the Association of Holocaust Organizations (AHO). Tom ideology; the influence of location; emerging role of the SS; the process received the NEA New Hampshire’s www.thelaker.com of implementing emigration policy and Champion of Human and Civil Rights Award in 2009; and in 2015Guide was named demographic engineering; and more. What-To-Do Your Where-To-Go, By exploring individual initiative of a Peace Ambassador by the Center Lakes Region forforthePeacebuilding from Bosnia and “working towards the Führer” the talk will examine the “moral universe” Herzegovina. created by willing perpetrators. thelaker.com Thomas M. White is the Coordinator Admission is $8.00 per person, of Educational Outreach for the Cohen by cash or check. Wright Museum members are admitted for free. Space Center for Holocaust Studies at Keene State College. He served on the Diocese is limited, and reservations are strongly recommended to ensure sufficient of Manchester’s Diocesan Ecumenical Commission for Interfaith Relations; seating forthe all. Lakes Call 603-569-1212 Region to Your Where-To-Go, What-To-Do Guide for is the co-chair and producer of the reserve your seat today.

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Your Where-To-Go, What-To-Do Guide for the Lakes Region

NH Waterfront Luxury Randy Parker Cell 603-455-6913 SPECTACULAR VIEWS!

LAKE WINNIPESAUKEE

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thelaker.com MOULTONBOROUGH Possibly the best view property in the Lakes Region with endless mountain and lake views. Located on 62 acres with a 2,000 s.f. deck, heated pool, luxe interior. $1,980,000 (4503232)

SPECTACULAR VIEWS

WOLFEBORO Stellar 180° mountain & lake views plus wonderful privacy! Contemporary home features cathedral ceilings, grand stone fireplace, 3rd floor observatory room with endless views. Lush landscaping on 15+ acres. Minutes to downtown Wolfeboro. $975,000 (4311561)

MOULTONBOROUGH-Exceptional Lakeside Living! 180° SW Lake views, Sun all day! Twodock system, breakwater, lush landscaping, A/C, home theater, 1st floor Master bedroom, private carriage house with in-law apartment. A must see! $1,975,000 (4228378)

LAKE WINNIPESAUKEE

TUFTONBORO The quintessential Lake Winnipesaukee 2 bedroom/2 bath cottage; on the eastern shore, considered one of the best shorelines. Enjoy all day sun and magnificent sunsets; dock and sunporch. $799,000 (4640200)

TUFTONBORO Sand, sun & sunsets, long westerly water views, walk-in beach with 228’ of level, sandy beach. Beautiful 3-bedroom contemporary ranch-style home has it all. Move-in ready, just bring your boat! $1,299,000 (4647322)

WATERFRONT COTTAGE

TUFTONBORO PRICE IMPROVEMENT! Terrific Mirror Lake cottage, 118’ shoreline, southern exposure, sandy beach, level lot, privacy. Sunny, knotty pine interior, center fireplace, plus a beautiful sun porch. $399,000 (4376116)

TUFTONBORO Exquisite 1700’s Colonial spanning 10+ acres, lovingly restored to original splendor, wonderful blend of period features and modern amenities, truly one of the most spectacular estates in the Lakes Region. In-ground pool and barn. $1,295,000 (4427885)

WATERFRONT GETAWAY

TUFTONBORO Seasonal waterfront cottage with 200’ frontage on Lower Beach Pond. Wonderful views from your expansive deck & most rooms of the house! Separate outbuilding could be bunkhouse. Great price for a vacation getaway! $379,000 (4653346)

Visit us at NHWaterfrontLuxury.com to view all properties for sale in the Lakes Region! 15 Railroad Avenue • Wolfeboro, NH 03894 • Tel. 800-726-0480

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WWW.ROCHEREALTY.COM “We Sell the Lakes Region”™

97 Daniel Webster Hwy | Meredith, NH | (603) 279-7046 • 1921 Parade Rd. | Laconia, NH | (603) 528-0088

Gilford: 115’ of crystal-clear shorefront on Lake Winnipesaukee. 5,044 sf., luxury home with 6 BR, 4 BA, gourmet kitchen, hardwood, tile & marble and other custom features and upgrades. The shoreline offers a 35x6 deep water dock with a 10,000lb boat lift for up to a 28’ boat and steps that lead to the sandy bottom swimming area. $1,999,999 MLS# 4642925

Belmont: Lake Winnisquam Waterfront Home with Lovely Guest House. Nestled on a perfectly level, westerly facing, waterfront lot this beautiful 3-BR, 2-BA ranch home has a beautiful wood stove hearth, cathedral ceilings and a huge 4-season porch at the water’s edge. Plus, a detached, 2-story, 2-bedroom guest house with forced hot air heat and attached garage. The property has beautiful, lush lawns, 2 large docks and a great swimming area. $549,900 MLS# 4638233

Gilford: Lake Winnipesaukee waterfront property with 50' of shorefront and a boat dock! The waterside main home offers spacious rooms, gorgeous wood floors, 2 bedrooms and a full bath. The back cottage has an eat-in kitchen, 3/4 bath and 2 bedrooms. The 40x5 deep water dock provides plenty of space for multiple boats. This is currently a seasonal property but with a few improvements you could convert to year round. $629,999 MLS# 4654054

Laconia: Located in the gated, waterfront community of Long Bay, this stunning 4 BR, 5 bath home is impeccable inside and out. It enjoys gorgeous lake and mountain views while featuring hardwood f loors, fireplaces, cathedral ceilings, a theatre room and a heated sun room. The master suite has a fireplace, private deck, a soaking tub and walk-in closet. Just a short walk away from Long Bay's private pool, beaches and docks on Winnipesaukee. $809,000 MLS# 4651315

Gilford: 400’ of water frontage onan inlet of Smith Cove with direct access to Lake Winnipesaukee with 2.04 acres of privacy. This charming, spacious vintage lake home has been in the same family since the 1930s. 4+ bedrooms, a lovely deck, expansive docking system with potential for more space and a 2 car garage! A small guest home on the property makes this a great family compound. Subdivision possibility with boating access for multiple boats. $669,000 MLS# 4613658

Gilford: Two waterfront homes with 61’ of shore front and a boat house! located in protected Smith Cove with easy access to the main part of Lake Winnipesaukee. The beautiful main home offers single level living & open concept floor plan and incredible views of Smith Cove PLUS a guest house and detached, piratethemed playroom. Two docks, a boat house and steps leading into the lake. $899,999 MLS# 4650373

Alton: Sensational views and 100’ of westerly facing shorefront on Winnipesaukee. This amazing Winnipesaukee waterfront offers westerly views for long days and sunsets over the mountains. The extensive water-side features include a 4-way tie dock, Cabana with electricity, and storage shed for all your toys and tools. Home features a cathedral ceiling, charming knotty pine, and floor-to-ceiling windows to take in the view. $619,999 MLS# 4628453

Meredith: Aqua Terrace on Lake Winnipesaukee is a small waterfront association with only 6 homes. The open concept f loor plan has a 1st f loor master suite, 3 large bedrooms with bath, a full basement, level yard and all in a great location. Enjoy the crystal-clear shorefront, landscaped grounds and a lovely, sandy-bottom swimming area, with beautiful westerly views on Meredith Bay plus your own boat slip for up to a 28’ boat. $699,000 MLS# 4639345

Sandwich: Enchanting home surrounded by White Mtn. Nat’l Forest. This authentic 1700’s cape has been totally reconstructed from the foundation up. Home has multitude of windows overlooking the 32+ ac. of fields and mountain views. Accented with wood-shake cedar clapboard exterior with a copper standing seam roof, 200 year old beams, custom milled cabinetry, wide pine f loors and 5 fireplaces. Surrounded by mountain ranges. $1,395,000 MLS# 4635099

Meredith: Adorable lake home and guest cottage on Lake Winnipesaukee. The tasteful and extensive renovations proudly show throughout the 3-BR main home and guest cottage with great charm and character. Sandy beach and a 50x8’ dock with a 34’ covered area and electric lift. Private location and the natural landscaping, stone walls and walkways enhance the property’s gorgeous curb appeal. Live in the scenic resort town of Meredith! $874,900 MLS# 4624311

Moultonborough: Lake Winnipesaukee home with unobstructed views from almost all the rooms of this 5,000 sf., masterpiece home. Top of the line mechanical systems including 80 solar roof panels that maintain the home for 8 months of the year. 112’ of shorefront outside, 2 sandy beach areas, a deep-water docking system for multiple boats, one of which is covered, jet ski tie-ups and a sunken hot tub patio area. $2,188,500 MLS# 4634936

Gilford: One of a kind, vintage lake house with a 215' of shorefront and a 2-bay boathouse! The home has been restored to its natural beauty and features oversized windows that showcase a stunning view of Lake Winnipesaukee, hardwood floors throughout most of the home, 2 fireplaces, wood ceilings and walls, and a detached garage. The double bay boathouse was restored 7 years ago and still shows like new. There is also a large deck/dock over the water. $1,200,000 MLS# 4654486 *Owner Interest

Since 1997, Roche Realty Group has sold over $1.86 billion of NH properties, involving 6,999 transaction sides, and is ranked 9th in the State of New Hampshire out of 1,062 active firms statewide reporting sales during this 20-year period* *Statistics obtained from NNREN’s Firm Market Share Report covering the period of 1/1/1997- 6/19/2017 for all active real estate firms in New Hampshire.


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September 4, 2017

Fun on the Farm and in the Museum in Tamworth! September offers a wide variety of programs at the Remick Country Doctor Museum and Farm in Tamworth. Mark your calendar, grab the family and head to the museum for all kinds of September farm and museum fun. Captain Enoch Remick House Guided Tours take place on Saturdays, September 9, 16 and 30 at 11 am and 1 pm. Visit the crown jewel of Remick Country Doctor Museum & Farm, the boyhood home of Dr. Edwin Crafts Remick. This stately house is listed on the National Register of Historic Places for its influence on the town of Tamworth, NH, and for its significant

architectural qualities. Tour highlights include 19th-century murals attributed to the American painter John Avery, period architecture, the original medical office and medicine room used by two country doctors, and a host of antique furnishings and exhibits. The tour is included with a $5 museum admission; please check in at the Museum Center. Tours begin promptly. An informative and fun Fiber Arts Group meets Tuesdays, September 5 and 19 from 9:30 am to 12 noon. Fiber artists or interested onlookers are welcome to join the Happy Weavers & Friends group to observe the historic art of weaving,

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spinning, sewing, quilting and more! Bring your project to work on and a comfortable space will be provided. Led by Barbara Lord, Volunteer Educator, the group meets every other Tuesday, year round. The drop-in group is free, but does not include access to the Museum. No registration is required. Ever want to take a stroll under the full moon? The Full Moon Campfire & Walk, held on Wednesday, September 6 from 7 to 8:30 pm is just the thing for you! Join museum staff outside around a campfire at Remick Museum & Farm in Tamworth Village. Listen to stories and make s’mores. When the moon is up, take a stroll and listen for nighttime wildlife. The stroll is weather dependent: if it is raining, the event will not be held. Dress for the weather and BYO flashlight. The Museum will not be open for this event; meet in the backyard, behind main entrance building. The program is free, but donations are gratefully accepted. Plants of Field & Forest Series: Outdoor Walk, takes place on Friday, September 8 and 29, from 2-3:30 pm. Led by Carol Felice, Herbalist/Museum Educator at Remick Country Doctor Museum & Farm in Tamworth Village, you will learn to recognize useful, interesting, edible or medicinal plants on the Remick properties as they come to the end of their life cycle. Walks take place on selected dates through November; join in one or multiple walks. Each succeeding walk will teach participants to recognize plants as they change through their lifecycle and add new plants to their repertoire. Dress for the day’s weather and varied terrain;

MLS #4653803

MLS #4431183

277 Kings Highway, Middleton Custom ranch on 21+ acres $389,000 Fae Moore - 603-833-0644

30 Spruce Road, Wolfeboro 300 ft of waterfront w/3 acres $3,488,000 Ames Oickle - 603-520-7014

270 Trask Side Road, Alton Three bdrm, 2 1/2 bath Cape with garage $368,000 Jodi Hughes Emerson - 603-455-9533

MLS #4654013

MLS #4632674

MLS #4503788

25 Oak Avenue - Waterfront Bungalow on the water $229,000 Fae Moore - 603-833-0644

245 South Main Street - Wolfeboro Commercial opportunity - Walk to town $628,000 Jodi Hughes-Emerson - 603-455-9533

189 Wentworth Road - Brookfield Fantastic home on a beautiful lot $239,800 Nicole Shamlian - 603-340-1025

MLS #4648781

walks will be fun and casual, but feel free to bring a small notebook or camera to help your memory. The 13th Annual Harvest Festival will be held on Saturday, September 23, from 11 am to 3 pm at the Remick Country Doctor Museum & Farm in Tamworth Village. The event is a celebration of agricultural life and historical crafts, trades, traditions and pastimes that accompany it, with seasonal food and festivities: demonstrations, historic agricultural exhibits and displays, live music, tractor rides, vendors, seasonal games and crafts for kids of all ages, farm stand vegetables, Farmhouse Kitchen baked goods and lunch. The Small Farmers Club at Remick Country Doctor Museum & Farm in Tamworth Village resumes on Friday, September 29 from 10 to 11 am. Ages 2-6 can experience the seasonal rhythms and chores of the historic farmstead. Through age-appropriate activities—including crafts, games, stories and animal meet and greets—participants enjoy seasonbased activities such as planting, milking, harvesting and wintertime indoor activities. This month’s program will be All About Hay on September 29. A parent/guardian must accompany their child for the duration of the activity. Children should be dressed to spend time outdoors with appropriate clothing for inclement weather. Preregistration closes Thursday, September 28/when filled. For further information, call 323-7591 or visit www.remickmuseum.org.

MLS #4654171

15 Senter Lane - Province Lake Seasonal camp full of charm $259,000 Kate Copplestone - 603-520-4887

Wilson welcomes you to Lake Winnipesaukee Berkshire Hathaway Spencer-Hughes 603-569-6060

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©2017 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently owned and operated franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.®. Equal Housing Opportunity.


September 4, 2017

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I n t he ultimate h omes, i nsp i rat i o n i s draw n f rom ref lection .

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WINNIPESAUKEE VIEWS

Meredith 603.677.7012 | Wolfeboro 603.941.1000

CUSTOM HOME WITH VIEWS

HILLSIDE CONTEMPORARY

GILFORD, NH

HOLDERNESS, NH

CHICHESTER, NH

This European inspired custom home combines old world detail with modern convenience. Enjoy spacious living with four bedrooms and four baths.

Large home on five acres with four bedrooms, game room with bar, fireplace and association beach with moorings. Deeded dock available.

This quality contemporary home sits perched on hillside and stands out with a commanding presence over the neighborhood and Deer Meadow Pond.

$2,490,000 | MLS#4645935 BRIAN NEIDHARDT | 603.738.3798

$774,900 | MLS#4632290 RUTH NEIDHARDT | 603.455.0176

$639,900 | MLS#4654288 ROY SANBORN | 603.455.0335

LUXURY LIVING

PICTURESQUE COUNTRY LIVING

RIVERSIDE CONTEMPORARY

GILFORD, NH

MEREDITH, NH

THORNTON, NH

Enjoy one-level living located on a landscaped 3.5 private acre lot abutting The Pheasant Ridge Country Club. Serene with views from outdoor patio. $635,000 | MLS#4648814

Combining both convenience and serenity, this home has been maintained to the highest degree. Enjoy easy access to area trails, ponds and lakes. $550,000 | MLS#4644477

Private setting atop a knoll overlooking the Pemi River and within the Owl’s Nest Resort and Golf Club, making this property a unique find.

MEAGAN BOWEN | 603.630.1185

BRIAN NEIDHARDT | 603.738.3798

$500,000 | MLS#4629673 SARA HOLLAND | 802.291.3850

STORY BOOK HOME

OAK KNOLL

PLENTY OF PRIVACY

LOUDON, NH

MEREDITH, NH

LACONIA, NH

This home awaits your imagination. A winding driveway, brick and flower-lined walkway welcomes you to the front porch of this magical retreat.

Lovely 2700+ square foot Ranch with Lake Winnipesaukee views, beach rights, 1st floor master and in-ground pool. Close to town with great privacy.

$425,000 | MLS#4649573 ROY SANBORN | 603.455.0335

$399,000 | MLS#4654245 ASHLEY DAVIS | 603.455.7110

Spacious four bedroom, two and a half bath, raised Ranch with rights to Lake Winnipesaukee. Enjoy a lovely deck and private fenced in backyard. $249,900 | MLS#4649804

Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated.

ASHLEY DAVIS | 603.455.7110

Proud to be the Exclusive Real Estate Sponsor for Bank of NH Pavilion.


Page 22

September 4, 2017

Meredith’s “Do the Loop” Expands “Beyond the Map”

One of Greater Meredith Program’s (GMP) ongoing projects to enhance economic vitality expanded this year to “Do the Loop” and “Beyond the Map.” Directional signs and brochures located at the town’s docks and on the GMP’s website (http://greatermeredithprogram.com/do-the-loop) serve as a directory of participating Meredith shopping, service, lodging, and dining establishments. Merchants listed in the walkable “Do the Loop” campaign are located on Main Street and in the Mill Falls Marketplace. Merchants listed in a “Beyond the Map” section are located at a short distance. The “Do the Loop” promotional campaign invites people to walk the

loop around town, stop in to participating businesses, get a punch card, and complete it for a chance to win prizes. Locating the map and brochures at the busy boardwalk near the town docks entices residents and visitors who arrive by boat or park in the lot to Meredith destinations they may have overlooked. Over 30 participating businesses identified by “Do the Loop” window stickers provide punch cards to patrons. Patrons need just 15 punches to complete the card before entering it into a drawing for prizes. The punch cards go into a receptacle available 24/7 in the lobby of Mill Falls at the Lake on Dover and Main Streets.

Sign and brochures at Meredith’s town docks beckon to “Do the Loop” of Main Street and to venture “Beyond the Map” to patronize area businesses. The 2nd annual prize drawing scheduled for late October includes a Meredith Merchant gift basket bonanza, an overnight stay at Mill Falls at the Lake, or a tour and tasting for four at Hermit Woods Winery. The Greater Meredith Program (GMP) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit community development organization

seeking to enhance economic vitality, historical and cultural heritage, and town-wide beautification. For more information about GMP or volunteer opportunities, please call 603-279-9015, email gmp@greatermeredithprogram. com, visit on Facebook, or www.greatermeredithprogram.com.

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LAKE HOMES FOR EVERY TRADITION Summer days on the beach with family. Cookouts with friends after a fall hike. Cuddling by the fire after a day on the ice. These are the perfect lakeside moments we hold onto – and at Meredith Bay, you and your family can have a place to experience them for years to come. Resort-style amenities make your escape even more fun, community activities turn new neighbors into new friends, and the largest selection of new construction means you’ll find the perfect home to create – and rediscover – your family’s lakeside traditions.

COMMUNITY FEATURES • Swimming & Tennis • Lakeside Recreation Area • Community Events • Community Gardens • Fitness Center & Classes • Lake Access • Hiking Trail Network • Access to Southworth clubs in the U.S., U.K. & Bahamas

Stop by anytime — our Welcome Center is located just up Route 3 from The Weirs and is open 7 days a week.

MeredithBayNH.com | 603.524.4141 Properties offered exclusively by Meredith Bay Lighthouse Realty, LLC. The Lodges are part of Bluegill Lodge at Meredith Bay, a condominium. The townhomes are part of The Townhomes at Meredith Bay, a condominium. This is not an offer to sell property to, or solicitation of offers from, residents of NY, NJ, CT or any other state that requires prior registration of real estate. Prices and terms are subject to change without notice. Reciprocity benefits are exclusive to members and residents of Southworth properties, and subject to certain terms and conditions and may change from time to time. Please inquire for details.

Located in the Balmoral

Association on Lake Winnipesaukee, this contemporary cape features 3 bedrooms, 1.5 baths, open concept living/dining/kitchen with cathedral ceilings, a nice deck off the Master bedroom, a finished lower family room, and a garage underneath! Plenty of room for all your guests and walking distance to the sugar sand association beach & boat launch. Enjoy the clubhouse, tennis and basketball courts, and much more at this wonderful private lakefront association!

Moultonborough Offered for $219,000

James Wiedman 603.387.2820 cell 249 Whittier Highway - Route 25 Center Harbor, New Hampshire Office (603)253.8131 • Toll Free (800)834.5759

LampreyRealEstate.com


September 4, 2017

Page 23

Island Real Estate

A division of Maxfield Real Estate

Luxury REAL ESTATE

WOLFEBORO // Prestigious Winnipesaukee Waterfront Estate with 180° views, 4.5 private acres, 6 bedrooms, entertaining kitchen, Great Room, full mahogany covered deck, sandy beach, 2-slip covered docking and sunsets! $3,975,000 (4446155)

Call 569-3128

MOULTONBOROUGH // Exquisite, artistically appointed 5-bedroom/5-bath, 7000+sq.ft. modern home located in Bald Peak Colony. Privately situated on 2.1 acres, with spectacular views, access to exclusive beach & docking. Call for your private showing! $2,400,000 (4654368) Call 569-3128

TUFTONBORO // Impressive Lake Winnipesaukee home with 384‘ on “The Basin”, 5 bedrooms, 4 baths, 4 car garage and wraparound porch, sandy beach, western exposure, 1.2 level and landscaped acres. $949,000 (4609863)

Call 569-3128

Island REAL ESTATE Motivated Seller

LACONIA // This highly desirable contemporary-style 4 bedroom Meredith Bay home offers stunning views of Lake Winnipesaukee. Open concept 1st floor, lower level finished walkout basement.

HOLDERNESS // Built right on the edge of Little Squam Lake; this home offers lots of possibilities! Year-round, 2-bedroom, 3 baths, dock and sandy bottom crystal clear water.

$749,000 (4628189)

$619,000 (4654210)

Call 253-9360

Call 253-9360

WOLFEBORO // PRICE REDUCED Wonderful waterfront cottage at Piping Rock Resort with glorious sunset views across Winter Harbor, 2 bed, 1 bath, screened porch, assigned dock slip and a sandy beach. $295,000 (4451175) Call 569-3128

COW ISLAND - TUFTONBORO “Motivated Seller”-- Premier 4 acre location. 4-bedroom/4-bath with natural woodwork, vaulted ceilings, oversize windows, extensive deck & hot tub. 250’ waterfront with small beach, oversize U-shaped dock+single dock. $865,000 (4623779)

NEW DURHAM // Rustic cottage on the shore of Merrymeeting Lake. Brand new metal roof, 2 sheds for all your toys. Not many of these left for under $300,000. This won’t last long! $289,000 (4602711)

Call 875-3128

OSSIPEE // The Best of The Bluffs: Enjoy this spacious contemporary home well designed for the extended family. Hardwood floors, cathedral ceilings, screened porch, oversized garage. Waterfront amenities, sandy beach. Close to skiing & golf. $264,900 (4637316) Call 569-3128

LAND and ACREAGE

BARNSTEAD // Meticulous dormered Cape with hardwood floors, formal dining room, living room, huge front-toback Master bedroom, new deck, wood stove, landscaped yard and walkways, water access home. $199,900 (4653178) Call 875-3128

MEREDITH // The last buildable lot at Grouse Point Association! This beautiful lot is located next to a small pond in a premier gated community with access to Lake Winnipesaukee. Build your dream home and take advantage of the many amenities! $259,000 (4653254) Call 253-9360

FREEDOM // Deeded water access to Ossipee Lake with this 2.6 acre lot just off Ossipee Lake Road. Minutes to Route 16.

WOLFEBORO // Lake Winni Beach Access: Level .28 acre building site. Lightly wooded. Easy walk to super sandy shared beach & picnic area in Winter Harbor. Docks/mooring waiting list. $89,999 (4139895) Call 569-3128

ALTON // 1.17 Acre sloping and wooded lot has access to private 590’ shared sandy beach on Half Moon Lake. Expired 3-bedroom septic plan is available. Possible lake views. $49,900 (4611049) Call 875-3128

$54,900 (4650338)

Call 569-3128

BIG BARNDOOR ISLAND – ALTON Calm waters, wildlife & serenity makes you feel one with nature. 100’ of waterfront with beautiful sand & beach. 2-bedroom/2-bath, outdoor shower & 6’x30’ Trex dock will have you basking in your Island experience! $439,000 (4650119)

Call 569-3128

Call 569-3128

MaxfieldRealEstate.com • IslandRE.com Maxfield Real Estate has been bringing people and homes together for over 60 years. Explore the thousands of properties now being offered in the Lakes Region and beyond from the comfort of your own home. MaxfieldRealEstate.com is the go-to-site for buyers and sellers, with a wealth of information and resources to meet all your needs. Just one more reason why Maxfield is “simply the best.”

Wolfeboro: 15 Railroad Avenue • 603-569-3128 Center Harbor: Junction Rtes. 25 & 25B • 603-253-9360 Alton: 108 Main Street • 603-875-3128

RATTLESNAKE ISLAND – ALTON This authentic Josselyn Log Home boasts 2-bedrooms/2-baths & bonus room. The breakwater has u-shaped dock with docking for two boats. Open floor plan, master overlooking lake, 3 sliders and deck. Unforgettable sunsets! $395,000 (4647940)

Call 569-3128


Page 24

September 4, 2017

New Talent at Patricia Ladd Carega Gallery The new exhibit at the Patricia Ladd Carega Gallery in Center Sandwich is titled Eyes on New Talenth. The artists participating in the exhibit are for the most part local or in a few cases, exhibitors are among those that visit the Lakes Region for large parts of the year. All are serious in their pursuit of excellence when it comes to making art. The nine artists are Christy Bensley, Meredith Gisness, Betty Webster and Travis Bullard from Center Sandwich; Rhetta Colon and Wendy Wilson from Meredith: Pam Tarica and Shelley Holtzman from Center Harbor and Pam Urda from Moultonboro. This is a

refreshing exhibit of work in all media: oil on canvas, watercolor, acrylic, graphite, mixed media and sculpture. This fall seemed like a good time to show new talent at the gallery. Work is figurative, abstract or somewhere in between. There are some fine hands as is seen in the work of Rhett Colon and some bold color as in the work of Pam Urda. Travis Bullard is a sculptor who works in wood, while multi-talented Meredith Gisness and Wendy Wilson present abstracted work. Lovely landscapes of the lake are seen in the work of Christy Bensley, Pam Tarica and Shelly Holtzman. Betty Webster has her own charming interpretation of

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thelaker.com Meredith Gusness, Three Chairs, mixed media on paper, 10 x 13 inches area surroundings. This exhibit is the last for the summer of 2017. It has been a busy season with wonderful exhibits, unusual workshops, abounding talent and many visitors. The gallery is located at 69 Maple

Street in Center Sandwich, and the hours are from 10 am to 5 pm, Monday through Saturday and from 12 noon to 5 pm on Sunday. For more information, visit at www.patricialladdcarega.co or call 603-284 7728.

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The Ultimate Winnipesaukee Experience BIG BARNDOOR ISLAND Spacious main cottage & tri-level guest house, total 5-bedroom/2-bath. Fieldstone fireplace, large living area, screened porch, expansive deck. 200’ sandy frontage, loaded with blueberry bushes. Docking for 4 boats. (Two lots-of-record) $1,200,000 (4644832)

DIAMOND ISLAND Two adjacent Winnipesaukee lots, both with docking/breakwaters in place, 5.48 & 2.23 acres, 424’ of waterfront;.5.48 ac. lot includes spacious two-plus bedroom cottage. Incredible views and sunsets. Can be sold separately, see MLS. $599,000 (4651529)

LITTLE BEAR ISLAND “Hole In The Wall” cottage nestled on the shore of Little Bear Island. 2.48 acres, 100’ waterfront, 1-Bedroom with loft, great upper and lower decks, fieldstone fireplace. $319,000 (4646328)

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MOULTONBORO - Large young Adirondackstyle home on prime waterfront with amazing views. 6+ bedrooms, 8 baths, 3-car garage, private setting. $2,845,000 #4636714

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MOULTONBORO - Lake Winnipesaukee custom built craftsman style home with 2-story guest house, sandy beach, level lot on a small inlet on Moultoboro Bay. Quality & craftsWAKEFIELD 3 bedroom, 2 bath waterfront WOLFEBORO Custom built 3 bedroom 2 ½ manship throughout. $725,000 #4651686 Townhouse with dock, beach, swimming pool, bath Cape w/oak floors, marble fireplace, tennis, walking trails & wonderful water view built-ins, 2 Master bedrooms, 5 zone heat, on desirable 5 mile Pine River Pond. great storage. large yard with small brook. $259,900 #4627372 $299,900 #4465777

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LACONIA

15 Railroad Avenue, Wolfeboro

www.islandre.com 603.651.7040 | 603.569.3972

Randy Parker 603.455.6913 RandyParker@MaxfieldRealEstate.com

MOULTONBORO - Lake Winnipesaukee wa-

with a sandy beach, open floor idehome fofowindows What-To-Do Guterfront r , theallowsLayou to enjoy the o G plan, lots o T e r views. $899,000 #4642098 kes R e h egio W OLFEBORO r W u n Yo Street • 603-569-2533 (NH) 1-800-621-2533 15 North Main

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MOULTONBORO - Custom built luxurious waterfront home. Thoughtful construction throughout. Detached guest house, absolutely stunning. $2,995,000 #4649331

RATTLESNAKE ISLAND Prime location, situated on southside of the peninsula, this property enjoys calm water and long range southerly views. 1.29 acres, with 2-bedroom/2-bath cottage & spacious deck. Covered boatslip. Great island getaway! $439,000 (4655775)

Betty Ann Bickford 603.651-7040

Your Where-To-Go, What-To-Do Guide for the Lakes Region

348 Court Street • 603-524-2255 (NH) 1-800-639-5077 lakesregioninfo@nemoves.com

GILFORD This extraordinary Winnipesaukee waterfront home was designed and constructed with perfection! $4,395,000 #4396576

BELMONT Lovely park model in Winnisquam Beach Resort has many updates and room for everyone! $145,000 #4634902

LACONIA Endless opportunities with this .36 ASHLAND Versatile home overlooking Little acre Opechee waterfront lot with home and Squam Lake with 2 docks and shared beach. storefront. $259,000 #4622772 $249,000 #4612826

View these and all Lakes Region Listings on our Website! www.newenglandmoves.com


September 4, 2017

Page 25

Meredith A tasteful and spacious 5 bedroom waterfront home filled with exotic woods, high ceilings and a tasteful and well-appointed kitchen. It is open in design with enormous windows allowing the sun to shine throughout. This is a special home with a large U-shaped dock. Lovely lake and mountain views.

$1,249,000

Wolfeboro

Gilford

Gilford

A private Wolfeboro Manor on 7 acres has 600 feet of coveted Winnipesaukee waterfront. It is a masterpiece of architectural design with the warmth of wood, the arches, the curves, the stairways. Steel constructed 3 bay boathouse, 36x50 two story barn, and an FAA approved helipad. $11,900,000

Sophisticated design, incomparable quality and functionality embraced by timeless architecture this extraordinary home was designed and constructed with perfection. Sweeping 300’ waterfront lot, ever changing sunsets, picturesque lake views, private, covered dock, patios and beach. $4,395,000

This stunning 3-bedroom/3-bath Governor’s Island home has updates throughout. The SW exposure provides glorious sunsets. Large perched beach, dock, jetty, a sandy swimming area and a patio with firepit for waterside enjoyment. Spacious and well-appointed kitchen, walls of glass, fieldstone fireplace. $1,995,000

Gilford - This wonderful original Lake Home has beautiful views to Mt. Washington. The lot is level and private. The home has four bedrooms and original woodwork and has an enormous lakeside screened porch. A rare find on Governor’s Island. Amenities include beach, tennis, clubhouse, picnic area and more! $1,495,000

Alton - This lovely, turn-key condition home has a desirable westerly exposure with beautiful sunsets and picturesque views. The natural sand beach is large and has easy and safe swimming area. It is a beautiful home with a glorious waterfront, spacious dock and boathouse. Furnishings are negotiable. $999,000

Gilford - This stunning home, located in desirable Dockham Shore Estates, has lake views and shares a community beach and day dock. The interior has been updated to perfection. A whole house generator, irrigation, new Buderus boiler, state of the art electronics and alarm system insure care-free living.$725,000

Laconia - This stately home sits on a beautifully landscaped and private lot. It is just a short stroll to Bond Beach. It has been totally updated with new roof, flooring, appliances, fireplaces, paint and baths. Quality is evident. It is a beautiful and unique home in a lovely and convenient neighborhood. It shows like new. $477,777

Gilford - This comfortable detached 3-bedroom condominium is located in the desirable and well managed association of Country Village Way. Open in design with a sun-filled and spacious living/dining room with fireplace. With ample storage and closets and an attached two car garage, this is a great place to call home! $224,900

Gilford - This cute 2-bedroom ranch style home is on a lovely, level lot with mature landscaping. The home is sunny and bright with hardwood flooring and large windows. The kitchen opens to both the living and dining rooms. The location is terrific. This is a wonderful sun-filled home that has been beautifully maintained. $159,000

Susan Bradley Realtor®, CRS, ABR, GRI

Direct: 603-493-2873 email: susanbradley@metrocast.net | www.SueBradley.com 348 Court Street, Laconia, NH 03246 | 603-524-2255


Page 26

September 4, 2017

Tee Up for Golf This Fall! By Sarah Wright Golfing is a pretty big deal in the Lakes Region. In fact, it’s right up there with boating as one of the most popular hobbies in the area. With the natural beauty and scenic vistas in the region, it’s the perfect place to enjoy a round of golf. When I drive by one of our wonderful local golf courses, with rolling green hills, and perfectly manicured fairways, I get the itch to play. Of course, I’m also tempted to throw down a picnic blanket and have lunch, too! Here are some of the amazing golf courses you’ll find in the Lakes Region. Some are private, some are public, and some are a mix between the two. When in doubt, call for further

information. Lake Winnipesaukee Golf Club is a private, 18-hole Clive Clark championship course, where 700 mountain acres shelter almost 7,000 yards of magic. For 14 straight years, Golf Digest has listed the Lake Winnipesaukee Golf Club as one of the top courses in the state. The club offers professional lessons as well as exceptional practice facilities, top notch dining, and a golf shop for all of your golfing needs. The club is located at One Lake Winnipesaukee Drive, in New Durham. For membership information and other questions, call 603-569-3055 or visit www.lwgcnh. com.

High end quality furniture Decorative accessories • Women's clothing • Jewelry Call to consign your premium items 56 North Main Street Concord 856-0110

The Laconia Country Club, situated on over 200 acres in Laconia, was originally established in 1922. Back then, the course attracted the Boston elite and celebrity vacationers. Notable players visiting the Laconia Country Club through the years include Mickey Rooney, Jack Benny, Lee Majors, Bobby Orr, Guy Larose, Trace Adkins, Owen Wilson, and professional golfers Betsy Rawls and Gene Sarazeen. The recently redesigned (and walkable) 18-hole course offers challenges for beginners to low handicaps, and the natural layout includes fantastic views among its rolling hills. The Laconia Country Club is located at 607 Elm Street in Laconia. For further information, call 603-524-1274 or visit www.laconiacountryclub.com. The historic Kingswood Golf Club in Wolfeboro was founded back in 1915, and is a semi-private, classic Donald Ross championship course (18 hole, par 72) that’s open to the public. The club has a driving range/ practice area, putting green, fully stocked pro shop, golf lessons, club rentals, golf carts, lounge, and the Kingswood Greenside Tavern, hosted by Morrissey’s Steakhouse. The club is located at 24 Kingswood Road in Wolfeboro. To inquire about lessons or tee times, call 603-569-3569 or

visit www.kingswoodgolfclub.com for more information. Oak Hill Golf Course at 159 Pease Road in Meredith is a 9-hole, public course that caters to players of all abilities. Features like stonewalls, scenic beauty, and its four hidden greens give Oak Hill extra charm. The pro shop is fully stocked, and golfers can rent golf carts, pull carts, and clubs. There’s no need to schedule a tee time; just come when the urge to play strikes you! And after your round, enjoy a sandwich and cold drink on the screened porch of the snack bar and cocktail lounge. For more information about Oak Hill Golf Course, call 603279-4438 or visit the course online at www.oakhillgc.com. Pheasant Ridge Golf Club in Gilford offers an 18-hole course with stunning lake and mountain views in the foothills of Belknap Mountain, 400 feet above Lake Winnipesaukee. Golfers of all abilities will enjoy the peaceful, natural setting. Work up an appetite on the course, and then have a delicious lunch and a beverage in the fullservice lounge. The Pheasant Ridge Golf Club is located at 140 Country Club Road in Gilford. To schedule a tee time, or to find out more about golf • Golf Continued on page 27

34 North Main St., P.O. Box 2180 Wolfeboro, NH 03894 603-569-4488 www.melansonrealestate.com

GOV. WENTWORTH HWY. TUFTONBORO: Easy year-round paved access, 4-bedroom/6-bath home, sandy beach, dock and 2-bay boathouse! $2,350,000

SAWYERS POINT RD. TUFTONBORO: Exquisite Lake Lodge home with all the amenities including a 2-bay boathouse and beach. $3,675,000

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VIEW DR. MOULTONBOROUGH: Traditional Cape on the grounds of Bald Peak Colony Club with fairway views and more! $1,350,000

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September 4, 2017

Page 27 • Golf Continued from page 26

Two-Day Beginning Tatting Class at the Meredith League Stop by the League of NH Craftsmen – Meredith Fine Craft Gallery on Wednesday, September 6 and Friday, September 8 for a Two-Day Beginning Tatting class with international award-winning tatter and designer, Elaine O’Donal. The first class will take place from 10:30 am to 2:30 pm and students will discover the origins and history of this ancient handcrafting technique and learn about the basic shuttle equipment used, the patterns to create, and the process of tatting. The second class will take place from 10 am to 12 noon, and students will practice their new skills to finish up their tatted projects. The class will be informal and fun, allowing each student to proceed at

their own pace. No prior experience is necessary. Tuition is $35.00 per student with a materials fee of $12.00, paid directly to the instructor. The materials fee will include shuttle, thread, and beginner patterns. Students should bring scissors, and if desired, paper and pen to take notes. Space is limited and preregistration is required. To register or inquire about the class, call 603-279-7920 or drop by the gallery at 279 Daniel Webster Highway, Meredith, NH. For more details, visit http:// meredith.nhcrafts.org/fiber/ or the League’s Facebook page at http:// www.facebook.com/nhcraft/.

lessons and clinics, call 603-524-7808 or visit www.lakesregiongolf.com/ pheasantridge. Waukewan Golf Club in Center Harbor has 18 characteristic holes, beautiful scenic vistas, a driving range, practice green and practice sand trap area, PGA professional instruction, a pro shop featuring Ping, Titleist, Nike, and Taylor Made, and tasty menu items at The Farmhouse Grill. Many visitors to the course would be surprised to learn that the property was once a cattle and horse farm. In 1948, a veterinarian, Dr. Melvyn Hale, purchased the property. Then, around 1955, Dr. Hale decided to rough out the land to build a nine-hole golf course. Three years later in 1958, the course opened to the public. He later closed his veterinary practice, and completed the next nine holes together with his two sons. Golfers still appreciate Dr. Hale’s efforts today, and the course has many fans. The Waukewan Golf Club is located at 166 Waukewan Road in Center Harbor. Call 603-279-6661 for further information and to book tee times, or visit ww.waukewangolfclub. com. The White Mountain Country Club

in Ashland is an 18-hole, championship course designed by renowned golf course architect, Geoffrey Cornish. Nestled along the Pemigewasset River, the user-friendly layout features wide fairways, strategically placed bunkers, and soft velvet bent grass greens. Golfers of all abilities will enjoy a truly great golfing experience. Not only can you have a tasty lunch at the fullservice lounge and grill after you play, but there’s also a beverage service on the course. And why not turn your golf outing into a mini-vacation? The White Mountain Country Club has “stay and play” townhouse condos adjacent to the first tee for your convenience. Sounds like fun to me! The club is located at 3 Country Club Drive in Ashland. Call 603-536-2227 for tee times and more information, or visit www. lakesregiongolf.com/whitemountain. We’ve had such a beautiful summer and fall looks to be good as well, weather-wise. There have been many perfect days to play golf, and I’m predicting many more to come this season. Whether you’re a newbie or a seasoned player, golfing is a great way to have fun while getting some exercise, together with friends or family. The only question is, “Which beautiful course will you choose?”

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Page 28

September 4, 2017

New Hampshire Boat Museum Readies for 10th Biennial Race Boat Regatta on Lake Winnipesaukee Vintage Boats from all over the US and Canada are expected The New Hampshire Boat Museum is preparing for its 10th biennial Wolfeboro Vintage Race Boat Regatta, to be held on Wolfeboro Bay on Lake Winnipesaukee September 15 and 16. The two-day event will be filled with the thrilling spectacle of vintage triple cockpits, outboards, Gold Cup racers, skiffs, and hydroplanes running in heats around a one-mile course. To learn more about all the details of the event, visit nhbm.org and click on the Regatta icon for details. The Wolfeboro Regatta is regarded as one of the best venues on the vintage race boat circuit. Race crews are signed up to attend from as far south as Florida and western Canada. It is anticipated that over 40 crews will be present this year. Since its inception, the event has expanded to include daytime and evening activities for the race crews and public. The heats will occur on Friday and Saturday from 9 am to 5 pm, with over 40 vintage race boats performing demonstration laps on a one-mile oval course on the Bay. The public is invited to see and hear these boats run from the Wolfeboro Town Docks during these days. There is no charge to watch the heats from the docks. For those wishing to view the action up close from the water, the Winnipesaukee Belle will be offering

Jersey Skiffs racing on Wolfeboro Bay. (Courtesy photo) rides throughout the day. The cost for the water tours is $12.00 per person. Tickets can be purchased at the Regatta on the Town Docks in Wolfeboro. For those more adventurous, many of the race boat drivers are donating rides on their race boats with the proceeds going to the NH Boat Museum. The cost for these charity rides will range from $100.00 to $300.00 depending on the chosen boat. To view the boats which are giving charity rides, visit the Regatta section of the Museum’s website at nhbm.org.

Those attending the Regatta will be given the opportunity to view the crew staging area also known as the Hot Pits. This secured area will be open to the public only between heats, but will allow spectators the opportunity to meet drivers and crew and see the boats up close. This year’s Race Boat Regatta is sponsored by Bradley’s Hardware, Coco Engineering, Alton Bay Yacht Club, NAPA Auto Parts - Wolfeboro, Danna’s Collision Repair, J. Clifton Avery Insurance, HK Powersport in Hooksett, Bayside Concrete, Brock’s Building Supply, B&B Service Center, Rochester Toyota, Advantage Construction, Knight Security, Kenneth A. Lane Master Electrician, Ramsey Plumbing & Heating, Sal’s Advanced Auto, and Wolfeboro Car Wash & Executive Detail.

In-kind sponsors are assisting the Race Boat Regatta including Reliable Crane Service, Andrew’s Marine Service/Lake Tow, Corinthian Yacht Club, Wolfetrap Grill and Rawbar, Watermark Marine Supply, Stark Creative, Three Sisters’ Country Store, The Wolfeboro Inn, Jo Greens, Dive Winnipesaukee, J.C. Signs, and Carrier’s Construction. This well-planned event requires much coordination and collaboration with the American Power Boat Association, State of New Hampshire Marine Patrol, Town of Wolfeboro and the support of the community. Over 100 volunteers fill many stations including registration, hot pits, parking, and set-up and clean up to name a few. If you’re interested in volunteering for a shift please call the Museum at 5694544. The New Hampshire Boat Museum is open daily to the public for the 2017 season through Monday, October 9, from 10 am to 4 pm, Monday through Saturday, and Sunday from 12 noon to 4 pm. The Museum is a not-forprofit institution focusing on New Hampshire’s boating and fresh water heritage. It is located at 399 Center Street, Wolfeboro Falls, two miles from downtown Wolfeboro in the former Allen “A” Resort dance hall. For further information contact the Museum at 603-569-4554, museum@nhbm.org, www.nhbm.org or via Facebook. The New Hampshire Boat Museum is a member of the “Experience New Hampshire Heritage: The Portsmouth to Plymouth Museum Trail.” To learn more about the Trail, visit nhmuseumtrail.org.

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Page 29

The LPC reports only one loon chick hatched on Squam Lake The Loon Preservation Committee (LPC) reports that only a single loon chick hatched on Squam Lake in 2017. Both the LPC and Squam Lakes Association (SLA), two conservation organizations in the Lakes Region, asks the public to give the loon family plenty of space. Please make sure to stay at least 150 feet from them so the parents can concentrate on taking care of themselves and their chick. If the adult shows any signs of distress such as stretching its neck low over the water, swimming away, or vocalizing, please give them more space. Please use caution if you are boating in an area marked by LPC’s orange “Caution: Loon Chick” signs. Boat and personal watercraft collisions are the second-leading documented cause of chick mortality, and LPC and SLA request that no waterskiing, tubing, or use of personal watercraft take place in the section of the lake marked with the signage. “It’s a full-time job for two loon parents to raise one or two loon chicks over the course of the summer,” said Harry Vogel, Senior Biologist/Executive Director of the Loon Preservation Committee. “It’s important that we give them some space to minimize disturbances and allow them to focus on caring for and feeding their chicks, rather than watching us because we are too close. The best way to observe loons is with a good pair of binoculars. The best way to photograph them is with a long

Biologist. “We can all give this chick the best possible chance in life by giving it plenty of space, boating carefully in the areas marked with chick signs, and using only non-lead fishing tackle.” Loons are a threatened species in New Hampshire and are protected by state and federal laws from hunting or harassment, including following adults with chicks. If you see a sick or injured loon, please call the Loon Preservation Committee at 603-476-5666, or if you observe harassment of loons, please contact the New Hampshire Fish and Game Department at 603-271-3361 or Marine Patrol at 603-293-2037 for assistance.

Loon parent and chick. (Courtesy photo)

telephoto lens.” only loon chick this year,” reports Squam Lake lost 44 percent of Tiffany Grade, the Loon Preservation its paired loons in 2004-2005; and, Committee’s Squam Lake Project since that time, breeding success has remained at less than half that of the statewide level. 2017 is the first year ONE FREE ONE FREE since LPC began monitoring Squam ONE FREE WORKOUT YOGA CLASS Lake in 1975 that only one chick has ONE FREE YOGA CLA ONE FREE ONE FREE ONE FREE YO hatched on the lake. As part of itsFREE WORKOUT ONE WORKOUTWORKOUT Squam Lake Loon Initiative, LPC has been conducting intensiveWORKOUT research, monitoring, management, and outreach ONE FREE ONE FREE Save Money, Save Lives Pumped Gym Save Money, efforts to understand the causes of the 72 Church St., Laconia, NH • 603.527.6000 ONE FREE WORKOUT YOGA CLASS www.pumpedgym.net • info@pumpedgym.net declines of Squam’s loon population ONE FREE YOGA CLASS ONE FREE ONE FREE Money, Save Lives 72 Ch SaveSave Money, Save Lives Save Money, Save Lives WORKOUT and to restore a healthy population of Pumped Gym Gym Pumped Gym 100%100% of our ofprofits donated to Riverbank substanceHouse use substancewww.ni our are profits aredirectly donated directly House to Riverbank use WORKOUT 100% of our profits are donated directly toPumped Riverbank House substance use WORKOUT disorder residential recovery72 program. disorder residential recovery program. 72 Church disorder residential recovery program. Church St., Laconia, NH • 603.527.6000 72 Church St., Laconia, NH• •possible 603.527.6000 72this Church St.,long-term Laconia, 603.527.6000 loons to the lake. Like loons throughout Allandproceeds from business help make residentialNH recovery All proceeds from thisfrom business make long-term residential recovery possible recovery possible All proceeds this help business help make long-term residential www.pumpedgym.net • info@pumpedgym.net affordable for men seeking lives of dignity and responsibility. www.pumpedgym.net • info@pumpedgym.net www.nibbutiy and affordable for men seeking of dignity andofresponsibility. www.pumpedgym.net • info@pumpedgym.net and affordable for menlives seeking lives dignity and responsibility. New Hampshire, loons on Squam are Money, Save Lives SaveSave Money, Save Lives facing multiple threats; but results to Save Money, Save Lives Pumped Gym Pumped Gym Pumped Gym 100% of our profits are donated directly to Riverbank House substanceHouse use substance 100% of our profits are donated directly to Riverbank NH • 603.527.6000 72 Church St., Laconia, date suggest that elevated levels of www.pumpedgym.net • info@pumpedgym.net disorder residential recovery program. 72 C disorder residential recovery program. St., Laconia, NH• •603.527.6000 603.527.6000 72 Church 72 Church St., Laconia, NH All proceeds from thisfrom business help make long-term residential recovery possible recovery po10 chemical contamination in Squam All proceeds this business help make long-term residential Save Money, Save Lives re Church St., Laconia, NH • 603.527.6000 Money, Save www.pumpedgym.net • info@pumpedgym.net Saveand www.n affordable for menLives seeking lives of dignity and72 • info@pumpedgym.net A and affordable men lives ofresponsibility. dignity and responsibility. Pumped Gym Pumped Gym 100%100% of our ofprofits donated to Riverbank substanceseeking use substance our are profits aredirectly donated directly House tofor Riverbank House use www.nibbutiyoga.com • info@nibbutiyoga.com Lakewww.pumpedgym.net and rates of lead fishing tackle af disorder residential recovery program. 72 Church St., Laconia, NH • 603.527.6000 disorder residential recovery program. Church St., Laconia, NH • 603.527.6000 72 72 Church St., Laconia, NH • 603.527.6000 All proceeds from this business help make long-term residential recovery possible All proceeds from this business help make long-term residential recovery possible mortality have likelywww.pumpedgym.net contributed to the• info@pumpedgym.net www.pumpedgym.net • info@pumpedgym.net www.nibbutiyoga.com and affordable for men seeking of dignity andofresponsibility. Pumped Nibbuti Yoga • info@nibbutiyoga.com andGym affordable for menlives seeking lives dignity and responsibility. declines of Squam’s loon population. 72 Church St.| Laconia, NH | 603.527.6000 72 Church St.| Laconia, NH | 603.527.6000 “It is so important that everyone www.pumpedgym.net | info@pumpedgym.net www.nibbutiyoga | info@nibbutiyoga.com work together to protect Squam Lake’s

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September 4, 2017

NH Poetry Out Loud 2017-2018 As New Hampshire educators continue to find innovative ways to engage their students, high schools will incorporate the Poetry Out Loud program into their English Language Arts curriculum again this school year. The NH State Council on the Arts has opened registration for the 2017-2018 program, which is limited to 45 high schools and high school groups. Managed in New Hampshire by the State Arts Council, Poetry Out Loud is a nationwide program where students analyze the language and context of poems that span eight centuries. Participants memorize and recite poems from hundreds that have been identified by the National Endowment for the Arts and the Poetry Foundation

to represent the breadth of great poetry internationally and across generations. Competitors are judged on the quality of their presentation, accuracy and evidence of understanding. Participating schools and school groups are provided with free training, professional development clinics and resources for educators; poetry recitation and public speaking clinics for students; and access to an updated online poetry anthology. Approximately 10,000 New Hampshire high schoolaged students consistently participate, mastering public speaking skills, building self-confidence and learning about their literary heritage. In New Hampshire, winners represent their high school at four region-

al, semi-final competitions; semi-final winners then participate in the state championship. The state champion travels to Washington, D.C., for the national finals, where more than $50,000 in college scholarships and prizes is awarded to the top finishers. New Hampshire’s Poetry Out Loud supporters include the Putnam Foundation – a donor-advised fund of the N.H. Charitable Foundation – and the New Hampshire Writers’ Project. Other partners include the Poetry Society of New Hampshire, the Arts

Alliance of Northern New Hampshire and the Frost Place. New Hampshire educators interested in having their high school or regional group participate in 2017-2018 New Hampshire Poetry Out Loud and who would like more information should contact Julianne Gadoury, 603271-0791, julianne.gadoury@nh.gov. To learn about New Hampshire Poetry Out Loud 2017-2018 or to register, go to: nh.gov/nharts and click on the “Poetry Out Loud” button.

Castle in the Clouds to Host Kevin Gardner: Discovering New England Stone Walls

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Page 31

Housing Coalition seeks volunteers for its board The Eastern Lakes Region Housing Coalition is seeking community minded volunteers to join its Board of Directors. Residents from the Coalition’s service area towns of Alton, Effingham, Farmington, Freedom, Middleton, Milton, Moultonborough, New Durham, Ossipee, Sandwich, Tamworth, Tuftonboro, Wolfeboro and Wakefield are encouraged to apply. The Board of Directors meets monthly on the second Thursday of the month from 3:30 to 5 pm, usually in Wolfeboro. Board recruits would be welcomed to join the Coalitions committees: community education, fundraising,

governance and finance, depending on your area of interest. Committees meet periodically as needed. Formed in 2005, the Eastern Lakes Region Housing Coalition is a certified 501c3 nonprofit organization that currently functions with a 12-member volunteer board of directors and one, part-time staff program director. The Coalition works with its sister coalitions in the Mount Washington Valley and the Seacoast regions to promote awareness of the need for housing for our region’s workforce. The Coalition’s mission includes educating the public regarding the need for workforce housing, providing

guidance to regulatory boards and facilitating the development of workforce housing wherever practical. This past year, the Coalition hosted two informative forums on new regulations pertaining to Accessory Dwelling Units and a workshop aimed at land use officials regarding the New Hampshire Municipal Technical Assistance Program. Fundraising events included two flower sales – one in the spring and a second in the fall. The board hopes to expand its fundraising efforts in fiscal 2017-2018. Prior board experience is helpful

but not required. The board provides educational materials and an orientation session for all new members. In addition, once on board, members are invited to attend a number of informative housing and economic development related conferences and workshops held throughout the year. For more information about the Coalition, visit www.elrhc.org or check out Facebook.com/ELRHC. Interested candidates should send a brief letter of interest with contact information via email to Program Director Larissa Mulkern, at lmulkern@elrhc.org, or call 603-522-7150.

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Ossipee Historical Society Program At the Your Where-To-Go, What-To-Do Guide Historic Courthouse Square in Ossipee Corner Whatever did we do during the long winter evenings before cable, Internet, satellite and our ‘smart phones’? To find out all about old-time entertainment, plan to attend “Wit and Wisdom: Humor in 19th Century New England” on September 19 at 7 pm with Jo Radner. The program will be presented by the Ossipee Historical Society (OHS) and will take place in historic Courthouse at Courthouse the Square in Ossipee. In the decades before and after the Civil War, our rural ancestors gathered, reading aloud homegrown, handwritten literary “newspapers” full of keen verbal wit. Sometimes sentimental, but

Region the Lakes formostly very funny, these “newspapers”

were common in villages across Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont and revealed the hopes, fears, humor and surprisingly daring behavior of our forebears. Jo Radner shares excerpts from these “newspapers” and provides examples from villages in our region. Ms. Radner is from the NH Humanities To Go Program and will offer a very entertaining presentation. Plan to attend the short meeting, find out what OHS is doing and have refreshments following the program. For more information, call Lois at 603-539-1984.

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September 4, 2017

Yester year New Hampshire Education – in a One-Room Schoolhouse By Kathi Caldwell-Hopper As children head back to school and open new schoolbooks, they probably aren’t thinking about their ancestors having done the same thing many, many years ago. Getting an education in New Hampshire wasn’t as convenient or comfortable as it is today. Many children walked miles to school, braving rain and snow. School buses were unheard of and if there was a family horse or mule, it was likely working in the fields and not available to transport young ones to school. In the 1830s, Ashland, New Hampshire, like many New England towns, was a remote area. The town was very lucky to have as a resident Miss Nancy Perkins, who saw the need for a school in the area. Miss Perkins rolled up her sleeves and started a private high school in the Vestry of the town’s Baptist church. The school was in session from 1836 to 1847, according to Ashland, New Hampshire Centennial 1868 to 1968. She was said to be a wonderful teacher and parents and students alike sang her praises. Indeed, she must have been a good teacher with a love for passing on knowledge because she eventually married Oren Cheney and together, they helped found Bates College.

Schooling was certainly different from what we experience today. In the 1880s in Ashland, grammar school students were required to take an exam written by the school board each term. Pupils had to answer 60 percent of the test questions correctly in order to advance to the next grade. Old schoolhouses – usually consisting of just one room — were a part of the American landscape for decades. Ask any older person and it’s a good bet they once attended a one-room schoolhouse. These charming little buildings were every town’s answer to

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education and local children from age 5 to 15 or more all sat in one room, taught by a single adult woman or man. Conditions in many village schools were par with the rest of society’s housing at the time: a woodstove warmed the space and students were often expected to split and carry wood to feed the heat source; a bucket of water served as refreshment and another was for washing hands. Outside, usually hidden behind bushes, sat the outhouse. The Lakes Region had many oneroom schoolhouses and a few remain today and have found use as museums and historical societies. A very unusual school was in session at Canterbury Shaker Village in Canterbury in the 1800s and into the 1900s. The Shaker religious sect welcomed and cared for many orphaned or foster children over the years and they were given excellent educations at the Shaker school.

The one room, one-story school was erected in 1823. As the population of Canterbury Shaker Village expanded, with it came more children and in 1863 the school was expanded to become a two-story structure. Area children were allowed to attend the school as well as Shaker children. In Sandwich, NH, the Lower Corner School was a place of learning in the mid and late 1800s. Most towns were remote and many families lived in even deeper rural areas. Small schools were built to serve children in various rural locations. The Lower Corner School began in 1825 as the John Quincy Adams School, according to www.sandwichhistorical. org, the website of the Sandwich Historical Society. At that time, citizens in Sandwich voted a tax of $193.70 to build a schoolhouse. A former student, Henry Holmes, wrote of attending the school in the 1840s. He recalled the school was small with a plank door, tiny windows that were placed high and underpinnings of stone. A big fireplace heated the building. Four-foot wood fed the fire that kept teacher and students warm during the cold winters. Fireplaces are notorious for providing uneven heat and this one, as the former student recalled, provided heat that “burned the face while the back was freezing.” Students who sat at the back of the room took turns moving to the front to get warm during the day. In the 1880s the school was renamed the Lower Corner School. By the 1930s an addition brought indoor toilet and storage facilities to the school and a

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September 4, 2017 • Yesteryear Continued from page 32 playground. In 1944 the school closed and the students traveled to the Center School in the town. Children in the Cook settlement in Moultonborough had a schoolhouse near a spring. The school building was modest in size; one child who attended the school was said to be the envy of all the other students because he could coast down from his home to the schoolhouse door in snowy winter weather, according to Moultonborough to the 20th Century, a publication of the Moultonborough Historical Society Bicentennial Issue 1963. As the years progressed, school children had quite a walk to get to school – down a steep hill, through fields and over stonewalls and fences. Even with the arduous walk each day, some students were said to have good or perfect attendance. The Village School in Moultonborough was the site of learning for many years. During the early part of the 1900s the school was located opposite the Moultonboro Town House and was a one-room school. By 1913 the town improved the school as the population grew. An assistant teacher was hired in the 1920s and the school was divided and two regular teachers were hired. A jacketed stove was secured for the school and a note in town reports for 1923 stated, “The new stove makes it possible to have the rooms comfortable as far as the heat is concerned.” In 1925 a new school had been built and housed elementary school aged children. In her book, I Remember

Page 33 Moultonboro New Hampshire by Frances A. Stevens, she recalled being a student at the school in the late 1920s. “As I remember, when this school was first built there was a big stove with a jacket around it in the back corner of the room. In the winter when it was real cold she would have us gather around the stove for our classes. It wasn’t long before they put in a furnace with steam radiators.” On the other side of Lake Winnipesaukee, schooling was important in New Durham. The town’s original land grand specified that a portion of the community’s money be set aside for a schoolhouse. In 1779 the town raised money to hire a town school and for some years after, money was voted for schooling. At this time there were no school houses in the town and school masters were hired who traveled from town to town boarding with different families. These men would teach the children of the area the basics: reading, writing and spelling. By the 1800s schools were built in New Durham. In the late 1800s, improvements were made with the installation of blackboards, iron stoves and desks. In 1906, the annual report of the school board stated that “We cannot expect a woman to teach in a town paying $6.50 to $7.50 for 24 weeks in a year when she can obtain $8.00 to $9.00 per week for 34 to 36 weeks in the year. She will most certainly choose the latter.” According to The History of New Durham, New Hampshire by Ellen Cloutman Jennings, the original 14 New Durham schools had shrunk

35

$

to just seven with a school budget of about $1,000. Teacher’s salaries, supplies and repairs came out of this budget and the board closed schools when necessary if enrollment dropped drastically. Further north in the Plymouth, NH area, the village of Dorchester had a small schoolhouse that was built in 1808 and originally called the North District School. It was used as a oneroom school for area children until 1926. The school’s last teacher was Lena Bosence Walker. According to www.livingplaces. com, “…the 1808 Schoolhouse, a single story clapboarded structure, its gable front capped by a small gableroofed cupola and set above a rock wall foundation.” At excellent preserved one room schoolhouse is part of the Wolfeboro Historical Society on South Main Street. The Society owns The Clark House Museum Complex of structures at the site, including the Pleasant Valley

School. The one room school was built about 1805 on land in South Wolfeboro in the area known as Pleasant Valley according to information at www. wolfeborohistoricalsociety.org. Known for some time as District #3 School, some residents called it the Townsend School, because it was close to the home of Reverend Isaac Townsend, Wolfeboro’s first minister. (Perhaps the reverend visited the school and taught religious classes to the children.) The school was crude by today’s standards, as were most in New England. Local children learned to make due. All grades were taught in the one room. The enrollment of students ranged from 20 to 50. In 1959 the schoolhouse was moved to its present location at the Clark Museum Complex. (To tour the schoolhouse museum during seasonal hours, call the Wolfeboro Historical Society at 569-4997.)

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Tenderfoot or Extreme Athlete:

September 4, 2017

The Lakes and Mountains Have a Hike for You By Barbara Neville Wilson Photo Courtesy Andrew Drummond Nothing soothes one’s soul more than mountain air, warm sun and nature showing splendor through all the White Mountains. No matter your age, your time constraints or state of fitness, New Hampshire has hikes for you as summer turns to fall and the foliage begins to paint the trees. Go online or to your favorite book store and you’ll find a plethora of websites and books to help you plan a walk. You can savor the White Mountains for a scant few minutes or for a longer trek. No matter your chosen path, you’ll find rewards: drop-dead views, raw nature, animals in their element, and the simple pleasure of being outdoors in the fall. A recent non-scientific Facebook study reveals that families, seniors, romantics and teachers treasure hikes in the White Mountain

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National Forest. Favorite adventures range from easy and short to long and intense. Tenderfoot: If you want great scenery with relatively easy effort, resident Kim Matte recommends doing Black Cap in her hometown of Conway,

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NH. She and her young daughter enjoy it all summer long and into the fall. “We love this hike. Do it, 2-3 times a month in the warm weather months. We usually do a treasure hunt. I make it up: find a heart-shaped leaf, spot a bird, etc.,” she says. It takes about an hour to get to the rocky top. From Black Cap, she says, you can connect to Peaked and Cranmore, or take the lift at Cranmore Mountain (ski area) and walk across to Black Cap. For a truly breathtaking view, Stephany Cameron of Moultonboro, NH, recommends Foss Mountain, just a ¼ mile walk off the road in Eaton. It offers 360-degree views of the White Mountains after a barelybreathe-hard walk. Day Hiker: Boulder Loop is also a favorite for families with young children.

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Kara Jacobs of Wolfeboro, NH, recommends Boulder Loop, a 3 ¼ mile hike that has plenty of opportunity for on-the-path learning about tree species and geographic features. Every family is different, but Kara’s sons were doing this trail when they were just 4 or 5. Daniel Doan and Ruth Doan MacDougall caution in their 50 Hikes in the White Mountains, however, that “It should be considered more of a hike than a picnic jaunt.” At the top, expect to see splendid views of Mount Chocorua, Mount Passaconaway, and the Passaconaway Valley. Long-time Maine teacher Natalee Hall Stolz fondly remembers taking the Percival-Morgan Loop in the Sandwich Range. “I even took my • Hikes Continued on page 35

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class hiking there one year as a field trip,” she says. Just over five miles, it’s a good half-day journey where hikers traverse across rocks and by caves at the summits of Mount Morgan and Mount Percival. The views of Squam Lake (the site where much of On Golden Pond was filmed) are gorgeous. Parents be warned: starting children hiking when they are young can lead to romance and careers! Kathleen Masse of Vermont’s Sky Run Properties and her husband Rob are prime samples. As Kathleen tells it, they had planned to hike Falling Waters, across to Little Haystack, onto the Franconia Ridge Trail to Mount Lincoln, then to Mount Lafayette and back down Bridle Path, usually a six- to seven-hour hike. “We left later than we should have,” she says. “I was sitting on a rock on top of the last peak, Lafayette, eating an apple when Rob walked over to me and casually said, ‘So, you want to get married?’ ” He said it so nonchalantly that she scolded him, “Don’t joke about that.” It turns out he wasn’t joking. He was just so nervous he forgot to pull out the ring that had been burning a hole in his pocket all the way up the path. They have been happily married for years now and live and work in the mountains. Kathleen says, “Growing up in the Lakes Region and White Mountains has definitely influenced my life in a good way. I’ve always been passionate about outdoor activities…and yes, I wanted to run a business that allowed me to be located in the mountains…It is a dream to run a business that is in ski/hiking country.” Another solid day hike (allow at least 4.5 hours) is Mount Osceola, outside of Waterville Valley. With a 2000+’ vertical rise, it offers views of Sandwich Mountain and the old ski range of Mount Tecumseh. Stephanie Cameron offers the “Awesome views on top of

Page 35 Osceola!” as her reason for choosing it as a favorite and 50 Hikes…backs her, saying that at the top, “You are now standing on the highest of the mountains encircling Waterville Valley, and the panorama off this isolated summit is vast.” It offers glimpses of Mounts Hancock and Carrigain, Washington, Garfield, Lafayette, Lincoln, Liberty, Flume and Moosilauke. Extreme hikerAndrew Drummond of “Ski the Whites” counts Mount Carrigain as his favorite, noting that sunset views from its summit are spectacular. Kara Jacobs says, “One of my absolute favorites is the Signal Ridge Trail” to the top. Be sure to take your trail map and description along with you, and keep sharp eyes out to find and follow the path. Spring run-off or recent rain can require bushwhacking to avoid high water, and heavy storms in recent years have caused erosion that calls for trail detours. These inconveniences are soon forgotten at the summit where the observation tower yields opportunity for marvelous photography.” Seasoned hikers Laura Maroon and Brent Summers both recommend the curiously-named Six Husbands for other serious hikers. The 29th edition of the White Mountain Guide introduces it, describing “This steep, rough, challenging trail…” and explains, “At 1.0 miles, the trail ascends a steep ledge on a pair of ladders, then climbs under an overhanging ledge on a second pair, with a tricky sloping ledge at the top of the ladder that might be tricky if wet or icy…” Later “the trail passes over a talus slope that is usually covered well into July by a great drift of snow…” and steep terrain before reaching the top of Mount Jefferson. No matter the length or suggested difficulty of the trail, or the perceived fitness level of the participants, hikers should prepare themselves for the worst possibilities. Always check the weather forecast for the area you’re entering; dress for the weather, and plan the length of your trip with provisions and

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September 4, 2017

Tips to Protect College Students Against Fraud As teenagers head back to high school or start college, they may be looking for ways to earn extra money quickly. Gone are the days when teenagers need to secure traditional part-time jobs in order to raise funds. Now, they have options like browsing social media sites for quick and easy one-time jobs to earn cash when they need it. But with these new online opportunities come online threats. “As fraud continues to evolve, criminals target those who are most vulnerable. They also target the channels that appeal to younger individuals,” said NBT Bank Director of Information Security Terra CarnrikeGranata. “This type of fraud utilizes social media, social engineering, job opportunities and mobile deposits. It often targets students, young adults, newly-enlisted military or single

parents.” The most common fraud scams targeting Millennials and Gen Z right now include: 1. College Website Career/Job Postings – Colleges’ internal job sites are not immune to hacking or fraudulent posts. It’s important to know that a

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legitimate job post will never require you to have a bank account, ask for your banking information or request a transfer of funds. 2. Secret Shopper – After the target applies for a position to be a mystery shopper, they receive a check to deposit and then are instructed to withdraw cash to wire the money, so that they can “evaluate” the customer service. But the check is counterfeit and the victim has just given away his or her own money. 3. Online Sales Scam – When selling an item via an online auction site, the purchaser will mail a check for more than the final sales amount, then tell the seller to deposit the full amount and wire them the difference. Again, the check is counterfeit and the victim has just given away his or her own money. 4. Card Cracking – Young adults are recruited via social media to facilitate

fraud against a bank with the promise of a “kick back.” The perpetrator deposits a counterfeit check, and then tells the teen to report their debit card as lost or stolen in order to have funds falsely reimbursed. This is illegal. That’s why NBT Bank and the American Bankers Association share the following tips for teenagers and young adults to be able to spot social media phishing and other scams: 1. Do not respond to solicitations for “easy money.” 2. Do not share login information, credentials, pin numbers or other personal/financial information with anyone. 3. Be wary of “friend” or “message” requests from individuals you do not know or do not have any mutual friends, This is a common avenue for fraudsters to conduct the scams listed above. 4. Use privacy settings on social media and do not communicate with individuals you don’t know. 5. Report suspicious posts linked with scams. There is usually a dropdown menu near the post on social media sites to allow for easy reporting. This advice shouldn’t be limited to online posts, however. Teens and young adults should be careful with debit cards, bank account and other personal information in all settings at all times. For more information on understanding fraud and keeping your money safe, visit: www.nbtbank.com/ stopscams.

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LRGHealthcare Offers Prevent T2 Diabetes Program Many people are at risk for or have prediabetes and don’t even know it. Prediabetes means your blood sugar is higher than normal, but not yet considered diabetic. Diabetes is a serious disease that can cause heart attack, stroke, and numerous other complications. Type 2 diabetes can be delayed or prevented in people with prediabetes through effective lifestyle changes. How do you know if you are at risk for or have prediabetes? Visit www.doihaveprediabetes.org and take a short quiz to determine your risk. Talking with your healthcare team is also a great way to find out if you are at risk or have prediabetes. LRGHealthcare in the Lakes Region is starting a new session of a program called “Prevent T2 Diabetes” in September. For those at risk or who have prediabetes, this lifestyle change program provides education and support to help you on your journey to better health. The program was designed by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and aims to help participants increase physical activity and healthy eating strategies to achieve a 5 to 7% weight loss over the course of a year. The program meets for 16

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thelaker.com weekly sessions and then transitions to a monthly meeting for the remainder of the 12 months. A trained Lifestyle Coach guides participants through the program. This program will be offered in both Laconia and Franklin. Free information sessions are scheduled for Thursday, September 7 from noon to 1 pm at Franklin Regional Hospital and on Tuesday, October 17 from 9 to 10 am at Lakes Region General Hospital in Laconia. Call 603-527-7120 to sign up or find out more. Perhaps you already have been diagnosed with diabetes. You are not alone. According to the American Diabetes Association, “In 2012, 29.1 million Americans, or 9.3%

Tasty Lasagna Dinner at Union Church on September 14 The Women’s Fellowship of the Union Congregational Church kicks off fall with a taste of Italy. On Thursday September 14, a spread of several homemade lasagna recipes, tossed salad, Italian bread, assorted home baked pies, coffee and/or punch will be available from 5:30 to 7 pm. Tickets will be sold at the door only, starting at 4:30 pm. The cost for the dinner is $8.00 for adults and $4.00 for children. The church is located at 80 Main Street in the village of Union (part of Wakefield)

to help them better manage diabetes and live a healthy life. Topics include blood sugar monitoring, medication use, healthy eating, physical activity, reducing stress, goal setting, and more. Those with diabetes and their support members are welcome to attend this free workshop. The next session is starting on Monday, October 16 from 9:30-11:30 am at Franklin Regional Hospital. For more information or to register, please call 603-527-7120. LRGHealthcare is a not-forprofit healthcare charitable trust representing Lakes Region General Hospital, Franklin Regional Hospital, and affiliated medical providers. LRGHealthcare’s mission is to provide quality, compassionate care and to strengthen the well being of our community.

and the dinner will be served in the historic Reunion Grange Hall – Hotchkiss Commons across the street from the church (71 Main Street). Plenty of parking is available across the street behind the church, in front of the church, in front of the Grange Hall and along the street. Hotchkiss Commons is handicapped accessible. All proceeds will go to the Women’s Fellowship programs, which benefit the church, community and worldwide missions. For more information, call Betty at 603-473-2727.

of the population, had diabetes.” LRGHealthcare also offers a workshop called “Living Well with Diabetes”. This six-week group program was designed by Stanford University and aims to bring tools to those who attend

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September 4, 2017

Evita to Open 2018 Interlakes Summer Theatre Season The Interlakes Summer Theatre in Meredith has received the nod from Andrew Lloyd Webber’s new royalty company, The Musical Company, to open next summer’s season with Evita. The Andrew Lloyd Webber musical is based on the life of Eva Perone in Argentina. The show will run from July 5 through 15, 2018. The most well-known song from the show is the musical theatre/pop hit “Don’t Cry for Me, Argentina”.

Interlakes Summer Theatre producer, Nancy Barry, said she has been waiting for the title to be available and was delighted when The Musical Company came back with a contract after the success with other Andrew Lloyd Webber titles Joseph and The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat and Cats in 2017. For more information, call 603707-6035 or visit www.interlakestheatre.com.

Opera House Celebrates Selection as Hannaford Cause Bag program Beneficiary! The Rochester Opera House, a nonprofit committed to bringing quality entertainment to the region, has been selected as a beneficiary of the Hannaford Cause Bag program for the month of September. The Hannaford Cause Bag program launched in October 2015 and is designed to support local nonprofits through the sale of the reusable Hannaford Helps bag. The Rochester Opera House was selected by Hannaford store leadership as the September beneficiary of the program at the Hannaford store on North Main Street, next to Home Depot. For every Hannaford Helps reusable bag with the “good karma message” purchased at the North Main Street Hannaford, during the month of September. The Rochester Opera House will receive a $1 donation. “We’re thrilled to be selected for this

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incredible program that has already given back so much to our community,” said Opera House associate producer and publicist, Matt Wyatt. “We’ve been working hard to revitalize the downtown with our new Performance & Arts Center and this is a great way for locals to support the cause.” The Rochester Opera House is a nonprofit based in Rochester, NH. Founded in 1908, the Rochester Opera House has been committed to quality entertainment, events, and educational programming for children, teen, adults, and seniors. Learn more about the Opera House by calling 603-335-1992 or visiting www.rochesteroperahouse. org. For more information on the Hannaford Cause Bag program, visit hannaford.bags4mycause.com or facebook.com/hhbagprogram.

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September 4, 2017

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